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Digitized  by  the  Internet  Archive 
in  2018  with  funding  from 
Harvard  T.H.  Chan  School  of  Public  Health 


https://archive.org/details/harvardschoolofp1964harv 


THE  CLASS  OF  1964 


THE  HAR  VARD  SCHOOL 

OF  PUBLIC  HEAL  TH 


BOSTON,  MASSACHUSETTS 


harvard  university 

SCHOOLS  OF  MEDICINE  AND  PUBLIC  HEALTH 
LIBRARY 


IN 

APPRECIATION 


TO 


WINTHROP  LABORATORIES 


t 

o 


\ 

J 


i 


DEDICATION  TO  JOHN  F.  KENNEDY 


OUR  late  President,  John  F.  Kennedy,  was  long  a  leader  in  the  health  field. 

In  the  Senate,  he  served  on  the  Committee  on  Labor  and  Public  Welfare  that 
considers  health  legislation. 

As  President,  he  strongly  favored  provision  of  medical  care  to  the  aged  under  the 
Social  Security  Act. 

He  was  the  first  president  to  make  a  public  proclamation  on  the  importance  of  a 
community  action  program  to  combat  mental  illness  and  mental  retardation  which  has 
since  become  law. 

He  established  the  Peace  Corps  which  has  both  a  direct  and  an  indirect  impact  on 
world  health. 

He  was  an  inspirational  and  ideological  leader  for  young  scientists  and  humanists 
everywhere  who  are  concerned  with  the  betterment  of  man’s  condition. 

In  the  framework  of  his  discussion  of  mental  illness  and  mental  retardation  he 
offered  public  health  workers  in  every  setting  and  every  land  a  voice  of  strength  and 
vision  when  he  said, 

mint  seek  out  the  causes  ■  ■  .  ;  u'e  must  strengthen  the  underlying 
resources  of  knowledge  and  .  .  .  manpower  ■  ■  ■  ;  ice  must  strengthen  and 
improve  the  programs  and  facilities.  Prevention  should  he  given  the  highest 
priority. 

” .  .  .  lUe  must  act  .  .  .  to  bestow  the  full  benefits  of  our  society  on  those 
u’ho  suffer  .  .  .  to  restore  and  revitalize  their  lives.” 


President  Kennedy  signing 
Mental  Health  Bill  S-1576. 


4 


ADMINISTRA  TION 


John  Crayton  Snyder,  A.B.,  M.D. 

Dea)i  of  the  School  of  Public  Health 
Heury  Pickering  W^alcott  Professor  of  Microbology 
and  Head  of  the  Departjnent 


6 


James  L.  Whittenberger,  S.B.,  M.D.,  A.M.  (Hon.) 

Assistant  Dean  of  the  School  of  Pnblic  Health 
fames  Stevens  Simmons  Professor  of  Public  Health 
Professor  of  Physiology  and  Head  of  the  Department 


ADMINISTRA  TIVE  STAFF 


Left  to  right — Margaret  Barnaby,  Colette  Farragher,  Beverly  Laskey,  Agnes  Murphy, 
Gail  Stocker,  Bess  Foxman,  William  Claff,  Roger  Spaulding,  Mary  Turchin,  Jean 
Haley,  Margaret  Penrose,  Irene  Forbes,  Judith  Godden,  John  C.  Snyder. 


7 


WiLLiAi\[  Hathavc’ay  Forbes,  A.B.,  A.M.,  Dr.  Phil.,  M.D. 

Assistant  to  the  Dean  and  Faculty  Advisor  for 
Foreign  Students 


Foreign  students  arrived  to  a  warm  welcome  at  an 
Orientation  Course  in  September,  1963.  This  served  as 
an  introduction  to  the  School,  to  Boston,  and  to  the  Amer¬ 
ican  way  of  life.  It  was  also  a  first  meeting  with  the  Advisor 
to  Foreign  Students,  Dr.  William  Forbes,  who  proved  very 
helpful  throughout  the  year,  not  only  in  his  official  capacity 
but  on  a  private  and  personal  basis  as  well. 


OUR  ORIGINS  AND  DESTINATIONS 


OUR  September  20  meeting  with  the  Dean  brought  us  together,  76  of  us  for  the 
first  time,  to  learn  some  surprising  things  about  our  composite  character.  We  are 
the  42nd  class.  Our  alumni  cover  all  the  United  States  and  80  foreign  countries. 

The  class  of  1963-64  is  no  exception  to  this  catholic  representation: 


United  States  . 86 

Europe  .  7 

India  and  Pakistan  .  3 

Africa  .  2 

Far  East  .  2 

Canada  .  2 

Middle  East  .  2 

Australia  .  1 

Total  from  20  countries  . 107 

Academically,  we  hope  to  take  home  the  following  degrees: 

Dr.  P.H .  7 

S.D.  Hyg . 20 

S.M.  Hyg . 31 

M.P.H.  . 38 

M.I.H .  2 

Special  students  .  9 


8 


But  a  staggering  number  of  student-years  have  already  garnered  the  following: 


M.D . 61 

Ph.D .  4 

D.D.S .  2 

D.V.M .  3 

M.S.W .  3 

Others  . 33 


(Engineers,  Statisticians,  Nurses,  Chemists,  Biochemists,  Health  Educator,  Health  Ad¬ 
ministrator,  Sanitary  Engineer,  Radiological  Hygienists,  Industrial  Hygienists,  Nutri¬ 
tionists.) 

We  felt  that  such  persistence  deserved  investigation. 

In  February,  at  the  beginning  of  the  second  semester,  the  Class  of  1964  had  a  chance 
to  record  its  reflections  on  coming  to  Shattuck  Street  and  on  what  may  follow  after. 
Some  numbers: 

82%  answered  part,  32%  answered  most  of  questionnaire 
85%  describe  some  particular  area  of  public  health  as  an  interest 
20%  have  no  particular  future  position  in  mind 
40%  expect  to  return  to  the  same  job 

35%  mention  that  either  their  coming  or  their  next  position  is  in  the  hands  of  some 
organization  or  agency 

20%  mention  shifting  from  an  area  of  practice  to  an  area  of  research — and 
20%  mention  moving  from  research  to  practice 

Some  quotes: 

- — from  the  Class  — from  Geoffrey  Vickers 

"Saw  public  health  as  a  more  compre-  "a  greater  power  to  understand” 
hensive  enterprise” 

"needed  formal  training  to  perform  bet-  "techniques  limit  us” 
ter” 


"felt  epidemiology  was  the  tool  of  the 
future” 

"developed  a  greater  respect  for  the 
competence  necessary  to  do  planning  and 
lead  action” 

"the  content  of  the  field  is  growing  and 
new  tools  are  needed” 


"the  distribution  of  disease  is  full  of 
oddities” 

"it  is  within  the  field  of  public  health 
to  explore  the  processes  of  decision” 


"the  landmarks  of  history  are  the  mo¬ 
ments  when  some  condition  passes  from 
the  category  of  the  given  to  the  category 
of  the  intolerable” 


9 


NUMBER  ONE 
SHATTUCK  STREET 


EIETY-EIVE 
SHATTUCK  STREET 


The  Harvard  School  of  Public  Health 


NUMBER?  SHATTUCK  STREET 

Better  known  among  the  student  side-walk  engineers  as  The 
Hole,  soon  to  be  transformed  into  the  new  Harvard  Medical 
School  Library 


I  I 


RESEARCH  LABORATORIES  IN 


mVIRONMENTAL  HEALTH  AND  NUTRITION 


For  which  the  School  is  indebted  to  numerous  individuals,  corpora¬ 
tions,  foundations  and  the  government,  all  of  whom  have  provided 
facilities  and  funds  to  support  the  departments  housed  here:  Indus¬ 
trial  Hygiene,  Nutrition,  Physiology  and  Sanitary  Engineering. 


X-SIXTY-FIVE  HUNTINGTON  A  VENUE 


liu 


‘i. 


Robert  H.  Hamlin 
Head  of  the  Department 
of  Public  Health  Practice 


PUBLIC  HEALTH  PRACTICE 


11 


My  major  activity  and  interest  for  the  future  are  to  see  the  Department  of  Public 
Health  Practice  fulfill  its  responsibilities  realistically  and  broadly  to  its  students 
and  to  world  society  by  its  search  for  and  dissemination  of  knowledge. 

It  is  people — staff  and  students — that  really  make  a  department  what  it  is;  they  are 
by  far  the  most  important  determinants  of  its  interests.  And  among  my  interests  for 
future  major  activities  of  the  Department  of  Public  Health  Practice  are  the  following: 
•  A  better  understanding  of  sociocultural  factors  in  health  and  disease  and  in  the 
administrative  process. 

•  More  insight  into  methods  for  influencing  the  quantity  and  quality  of  personal  health 
services  available  to  people  throughout  the  world. 

•  Greater  comprehension  of  the  process  of  economic  development  and  the  particular 
role  played  by  investments  in  health  programs. 

•  Increased  understanding  of  the  influence  of  organizational  and  administrative  struc¬ 
ture  on  health  programs  through  the  comparative  study  of  different  organizations 
with  similar  objectives. 

•  And  last,  but  far  from  least,  better  curriculum  and  teaching  programs  for  our  stu¬ 
dents  so  that  we  can  assist  them  most  effectively  in  becoming  leaders  in  public  health 
and  related  professions. 

Robert  Henry  Hamlin 
Head  of  Department 


Left  to  right — Sydney  Croog,  Beryl 
Magee,  Roy  Penchansky,  Sol  Levine, 
Norman  Scotch,  Peggy  Salmon, 
Robert  Hamlin,  Marjorie  Young, 
Katherine  Fitzpatrick. 


15 


COMMUNITY  MENTAL  HEALTH  PROGRAM 


ON  July  1,  1964  our  Community  Mental  Health  Program  will  transfer  en  bloc 
from  Harvard  School  of  Public  Health  to  Harvard  Medical  School.  A  new  insti¬ 
tution  will  be  established  under  my  direction  in  the  Department  of  Psychiatry  to  be 
called  the  Laboratory  of  Community  Psychiatry. 

The  major  reason  for  this  move  is  my  wish  to  bring  our  activities  into  closer  relation¬ 
ship  with  the  main  stream  of  psychiatric  education  and  research.  In  the  new  setting  we 
will  participate  in  the  education  of  psychiatric  residents  and  medical  students,  and  we 
will  also  offer  a  special  program  to  professors  of  psychiatry  from  other  medical  schools, 
who  will  attend  on  a  visiting  basis  an  intermittent  seminar  two  or  three  times  a  year 
for  a  three-year  period.  These  plans  are  associated  with  recent  developments  in  Amer¬ 
ican  psychiatry.  The  rapidly  growing  interest  in  establishing  local  community  programs 
for  the  prevention  and  control  of  mental  disorders,  which  was  stimulated  by  the  Report 
of  the  Joint  Commission  of  Mental  Illness  and  Mental  Health  and  by  the  Message  to 
Congress  of  the  late  President  Kennedy  on  February  5,  1963,  has  created  an  urgent 
demand  for  a  reorientation  of  psychiatric  education  towards  community  and  preventive 
theories  and  practices.  In  the  past,  these  issues  were  mostly  viewed  with  disinterest  in 
medical  schools;  and  schools  of  public  health  offered  a  welcome  base  for  the  few  re¬ 
search  and  development  programs  in  community  mental  health  in  this  country.  During 


Left  to  right — Barbara  Lowe,  Claire 
Belyea,  Gerald  Caplan,  Charlotte 
Owens,  Rhona  Rapaport. 


16 


Gerald  Caplan 
Head  of  the  Program 
Community  Mental  Health 


the  coming  years  there  is  likely  to  be  a  radical  change,  and  our  move  to  Harvard 
Medical  School  is  an  early  sign  of  this.  The  professors  of  psychiatry  who  will  attend 
our  Visiting  Seminar  will  all  be  developing  programs  of  research  and  education  in 
community  psychiatry  in  their  own  medical  schools. 

I  am  pleased  that  our  move  will  be  effected  with  a  minimum  of  upset  in  the  educa¬ 
tional  program  in  community  mental  health  at  the  School  of  Public  Health.  The  new 
developments  increase  rather  than  reduce  the  need  of  public  health  workers  to  learn 
about  problems  of  the  prevention  and  control  of  mental  disorders.  Dean  Snyder  has 
announced  that  Harvard  School  of  Public  Health  will  encourage  cross  registration  of 
its  students  in  courses  in  the  Laboratory  of  Community  Psychiatry.  The  Laboratory 
course  schedule  will  be  arranged  so  as  to  facilitate  H.  S.  P.  H.  students  taking  elective 
courses  with  us  in  topics  such  as  the  theory  and  practice  of  preventive  psychiatry, 
strategies  of  community  mental  health  research,  group  and  community  processes,  and 
administrative  problems  in  community  psychiatry.  In  addition,  I  and  members  of  my 
staff  will  continue  to  participate  on  a  sessional  basis  in  the  teaching  of  regular  courses 
in  such  Harvard  School  of  Public  Health  Departments  as  Epidemiology,  Maternal  and 
Child  Health,  Public  Health  Practice,  and  Industrial  Hygiene.  We  hope  these  and 
other  measures  will  lead  to  a  full  collaborative  partnership  between  us  to  the  mutual 
benefit  of  our  students  and  of  our  research  and  teaching  programs. 


17 


Gerald  Caplan 
Head  of  the  Program 


SOCIAL  SCIENCE  UNIT 


There  are  two  main  missions  of  the  Social  Science  Program:  (1)  to  make 
physicians  and  other  public  health  professionals  alert  to  the  social  and  cultural 
factors  in  health  and  to  make  them  familiar  with  the  research  methodology  of 
social  science;  (2)  to  build  scientific  knowledge  which  will  help  public  health 
change  agents  or  men  of  action  and,  equally  important,  to  have  this  knowledge 
feed  back  into  and  enrich  basic  social  science  theory  and  methodology,  per  se. 

Sol  Levine 
Head  of  the  Unit 


Lejt  to  right — Norman  Scotch,  Sol  Levine,  Sidney  Croog. 


18 


sANITAR  Y  ENGINEERING 


J.  Carrell  Morris 
Acting  Head  of  the  Department  of 
Sanitary  Engineering 


19 


SANITAR  Y 


Myron  Fiering 


The  principal  areas  of  my  research  in¬ 
terest  within  the  Sanitary  Engineering 
Department  have  been  two;  the  chemistry 
of  the  chlorination  and  disinfection  of 
water  supplies,  and  the  adsorptive  removal 
of  persistent  pollutants  from  waste  waters. 

Gaseous  chlorine  or  germicidal  compounds 
of  chlorine  and  other  halogens  when  added 
to  water  react  in  a  variety  of  ways  with  the 
water  or  with  impurities  in  it.  The  germi¬ 
cidal  effectiveness  of  a  particular  material 
or  method  of  treatment  is  a  function  of  the 
types  of  reactions  occurring,  their  rates,  and 
the  equilibrium  or  final  concentrations  of 
the  products  of  the  reactions.  Among  the 
most  significant  of  these  reactions  are  those 
with  ammonia  or  other  nitrogenous  com¬ 
pounds  to  yield  chloramines.  Studies  on  the 
formation  and  reactions  of  chloramines  have 
been  a  continuing  research  interest  for  the 
past  18  years.  Just  now  the  reactions  of 


20 


ENGINEERING 


Gordon  M.  Fair 


aqueous  chlorine  with  sulfamate,  an  addi¬ 
tive  being  used  to  stabilize  residual  chlorine 
in  swimming  pools,  are  being  studied.  It  is 
hoped  that  all  of  this  work  can  be  sum¬ 
marized  in  a  monograph  within  the  next 
year  or  two. 

For  the  past  three  years,  I  have  also 
been  investigating  the  removal  of  detergents, 
pesticides  and  other  noxious  persistent  com¬ 
pounds  from  wastes  and  polluted  waters  by 
adsorption  on  granular  activated  carbon. 
This  has  been  a  part  of  the  Advanced 
Waste  Treatment  Program  of  the  U.  S. 
Public  Health  Service.  Results  have  been 
encouraging  and  it  appears  that  adsorption 
with  granular  beds  of  activated  carbon  may 
be  an  economically  feasible  method  for 
water  treatment  in  many  instances. 


J.  Carrell  Morris 
Head  of  the  Department 


21 


Robert  Balentine  Reed 
Head  of  the  Department 
of  Biostatistics 


BIOSTATISTICS 


22 


I  TEND  to  agree  with  the  remark  attributed  to 
Lord  Kelvin,  "When  you  cannot  measure  it, 
when  you  cannot  express  it  in  numbers,  your  knoiii- 
edge  is  of  a  maegre  and  unsatisfactory  kind.” 

The  most  useful  numbers  are,  of  course,  statistics, 
since  statistics  not  only  express  knowledge  but,  at  the 
same  time,  measure  lack  of  knowledge  or  uncer¬ 
tainty.  In  a  world  full  of  decisions  that  have  to  be 
made  in  the  face  of  uncertainty,  such  numbers  should 
be  a  great  comfort. 

Robert  B.  Reed 
Head  of  the  Department 


Left  to  right — Jane  Menken  at  the  IBM  1620  playing  Reed’s  composition  for  typewriter  and 
EDPS  for  Diana  Fischer,  Joan  Davidson,  Lena  Wettermark,  Claire  Wasserboehr,  Robert  Reed, 
Linda  Parrish,  Judith  Bryden,  Carol  Evans,  Jane  Worcester,  and  David  Heer. 


23 


There  is  now  an  increased  opportunity  to  see  whether  well  planned  programs 
which  mobilize  the  capabilities  of  physicians,  nurses,  and  social  workers  can  effec¬ 
tively  extend  the  best  of  maternity  and  infant  health  care  among  the  population  which 
suffers  from  "urban  medical  blight.”  This  opportunity  exists  because  of  the  new  pro¬ 
gram  of  maternity  and  infant  care  projects  authorized  by  Congress,  under  the  direction 
of  the  Children’s  Bureau. 

When  the  infant  mortality  rate  in  one  health  district  of  a  city  is  more  than  21/2  times 
greater  than  the  rate  in  another  health  district,  I  think  we  have  a  problem  of  great 
interest  and  of  great  importance.  The  infant  mortality  rate  actually  increased  in  seven 
Boston  Health  Districts  between  1950  and  1961.  The  problem  of  higher  rates  of  infant 
death,  and  premature  birth  with  its  sequelae,  among  poverty-ridden  groups  is  similar 
in  all  the  large  cities,  and  25  million  people  live  in  15  cities  in  the  United  States. 


Left  to  right  —  Derek 
Robinson,  Olivia  Brum, 
Sylvia  Krakow,  Elizabeth 
Rice,  Ruth  Butler,  William 
Schmidt,  Miriam  Ekdahl, 
Isabelle  Valadian. 


I  hope  that  studies  related  to  the  new  maternity  and  infant  care  projects  will  show 
whether  perinatal  casualties  can  be  reduced  and,  if  so,  to  what  extent  and  by  what 
means.  Such  studies  are  closely  related  to  other  community  studies  of  maternal  and 
child  health  that  we  have  been  interested  in.  Among  them  are  studies  of  variation  in 
prenatal  and  child  care  in  Cambridge,  social  factors  in  child  health  services  in  a  hous¬ 
ing  development,  and  care  of  children  of  parents  hospitalized  for  mental  illness.  Involve¬ 
ment  with  problems  of  maternal  and  child  health  services  in  this  area  provides  fresh 
material  for  seminars,  the  chief  method  of  teaching  in  the  Department. 

I  have  a  deep  interest  in  the  problems  of  maternal  and  child  health  in  other  coun¬ 
tries,  but  I  think  that  the  problem  on  our  doorstep  cannot  be  ignored. 

William  M.  Schmidt 
Head  of  the  Department 


24 


MATERNAL  AND 


William  Morris  Schmidt 
Head  of  Departmefii 
of  Maternal  and 
Child  Health 


CHILD  HEALTH 


TROPICAL  PUBLIC  HEALTH 


26 


Rear  Row — Dr.  Michelson,  Dr.  Spielman,  Dr.  Frothingham,  Dr.  Alford,  Dr.  Pan,  Dr.  Chernin, 

Dr.  Burnett.  Front  Row — Mrs.  Butler,  Dr.  Weller. 


Those  of  us  in  the  Department  of  Tropical  Public  Health  find  our  interests  focused 
on  the  ever  expanding  list  of  infectious  agents  that  attack  mankind,  and  particu¬ 
larly  on  the  ecological  determinants  of  the  diseases  they  produce.  In  a  brief  summary, 
it  is  possible  to  express  specific  priorities  of  interest  in  such  a  multifaceted  area  only 
in  general  terms.  At  the  top  of  the  general  list  must  come  the  primary  responsibility 
of  any  academic  institution,  namely,  the  task  of  attempting  to  improve  our  teaching 
program  so  as  better  to  disseminate  relevant  knowledge,  to  our  student  body  and  to 
colleagues  in  other  disciplines.  Our  teaching  obligations  increase  as  old  infectious  dis¬ 
ease  problems  reappear  in  new  forms — at  a  time  when  it  is  fashionable  to  de-emphasize 
the  teaching  of  infectious  disease  at  all  educational  levels  in  medicine  and  public 
health. 

A  second  obligation  inherent  in  an  academic  environment  is  the  development  of 
new  knowledge,  and  particularly  of  knowledge  that  is  immediately  relevant  to  the 
solution  of  pressing  health  problems.  We  look  with  pride,  for  example,  on  the  con¬ 
tributions  of  our  research  group  that  for  the  past  ten  years  has  focused  on  schisto¬ 
somiasis,  and  has  now  achieved  a  worldwide  reputation  for  pioneering  research  on 
this  most  important  parasitic  disease. 

A  final  obligation  deals  with  the  responsibility  to  perpetuate  and  improve  the  sub¬ 
stance  and  philosophy  of  our  program.  Thus,  we  are  involved  in  a  variety  of  programs 
that  literally  are  global  in  extent.  These  range  from  the  recruitment  of  medical  stu¬ 
dents  through  the  provision  of  field  experience  in  developing  areas,  to  the  acceptance 
of  a  direct  role  in  the  molding  of  scientific  and  other  decisions  at  various  levels  via 
service  with  national  and  international  consultant  groups.  In  line  with  this  objective, 
it  is  our  hope  that  the  Class  of  1964,  as  a  consequence  of  the  mutually  stimulating 
interaction  that  should  characterize  the  student-teacher  relationship,  will  have  found 
something  of  philosophical  as  well  as  factual  value  in  our  offering. 

Thomas  H.  Weller 
Head  of  the  Departoient 


27 


MICROBIOLOGY 


John  C.  Snyder 
Head  of  the  Department  of 
Microbiology 


The  most  important  activity  of  the  Microbiology  Department  in  the  immediate 
future  is  that  of  developing  its  part  of  the  new  Center  for  Prevention  of  Infectious 
Diseases,  namely,  the  establishment  of  endowment  and  construction  funds,  the  planning 
of  new  laboratories  and  classrooms,  and  the  coordination  of  the  teaching  program  with 
the  new  curriculum  for  the  Master  of  Public  Health  degree. 

At  present,  the  two  departments  most  directly  concerned  with  infectious  diseases. 
Microbiology  and  Tropical  Public  Health,  are  located  at  a  considerable  distance  from 
one  another  in  different  buildings  and  are  handicapped  by  crowded  and  inadequate 
facilities.  During  the  academic  year  1963-64,  we  are  launching  a  major  effort  to  obtain 
funds  for  the  construction  of  six  floors  in  the  new  research  buildings  of  the  school. 
These  floors  will  be  designed  to  provide  adequate  facilities  not  only  for  research  on 
the  various  infectious  agents  which  continue  to  plague  mankind  but  also  for  the  explora¬ 
tion  of  the  role  of  infectious  agents  in  the  causation  of  diseases  hitherto  regarded  as 
non-infectious,  for  example,  cancer,  mental  retardation  and  certain  chronic  degenera¬ 
tive  disorders. 

The  importance  of  the  emphasis  by  the  Harvard  School  of  Public  Health  on  the 
prevention  of  infectious  diseases  is  underscored  by  the  recent  trend  in  medical  educa¬ 
tion  to  reduce  sharply  the  time  devoted  to  the  study  of  infectious  diseases.  Thus  com¬ 
munities,  states,  and  nations  must  depend  increasingly  on  the  graduates  of  schools  of 
public  health  for  intelligent  leadership  in  the  control  and  prevention  of  epidemics  and 
in  the  search  for  the  causes  of  diseases  affecting  large  segments  of  society.  The  School 
has  accepted  the  responsibility  for  intensifying  its  program  of  research  on  infectious 
diseases,  and  for  providing  in  its  future  curriculum  a  comprehensive  and  balanced 
presentation,  to  include  the  essential  knowledge  as  well  as  the  principles  upon  wihch 
to  base  wise  administrative  practices  in  the  prevention  and  control  of  infectious 
diseases  of  man. 


28 


John  C.  Snyder 
Head  of  the  Department 


John  Snyder,  Sam  Bell,  Ed  Murray,  Charlotte  Campbell,  Bill  Vinson. 


ARAMCO  TRACHOMA  RESEARCH  PROGRAM 
Left  to  right — Mehdi  Hassan,  Sayed  Saud,  Saeed  Ahmed.  A1  Gharyafi,  Ibrahim  Ali,  Beverly  Grear, 
Dorothy  McComb,  John  Snyder,  Roger  Nichols,  Nadim  Haddad.  S.  D.  Bell,  Edna  Tietjen,  Ali 

Abdul  Rahman. 


29 


PHYSIOLOGY  AND  THE  DIVISION 
OF  EVIRONMENTAL  HEALTH  SCIENCES 

AS  one  engaged  more  in  administrative  than  other  academic  matters,  I  find  it  diffi¬ 
cult  to  identify  a  single  activity  of  maximum  concern.  Two  activities,  however, 
are  of  recurring  interest.  One  is  the  recruitment  of  qualified  students  into  the  several 
fields  of  environmental  health — for  example,  those  dealing  with  air  and  water  quality, 
ionizing  radiation,  and  occupational  health.  College  students  generally  are  unaware  of 
these  fields  and  we  are  now  trying  to  develop  methods  for  recruiting  from  New  England 
colleges,  using  as  one  mechanism  the  offer  of  summer  employment  in  active  research 
projects  at  the  School.  This  method  could  be  extended  to  involve  other  departments. 

The  second  major  recurring  interest  is  the  development  of  methods  for  studying 
possible  biologic  effects  of  long-term  low  level  exposure  to  environmental  stresses, 
including  such  factors  as  altitude  or  high  barometric  pressure,  and  air  contaminants  in 
industrial  or  residential  environments.  Methods  range  from  biochemical  and  psysiologic 
responses  of  cells  and  laboratory  animals  to  field  studies  of  human  populations. 


30 


James  L.  Whittenberger 
Head  of  the  Department 


Seated — Mrs.  Price,  Edna  Dahlquist,  Mary  Ann  DiNapoli,  Mrs.  Tinsley.  Standhig — Ed  Berger, 
Howard  Stoudt,  Roland  Moore,  Dick  Easton,  Ross  McEarland,  Toula  Coules,  Syd  Tune,  Norman 
Mackworth,  Richard  Domey,  Jerry  Tinsley,  Tom  Crowley. 


A  VIA  TION  MEDICINE  PR  OCR  AM 


The  program  in  aviation  medicine  at  the  Guggenheim  Center  was  established  to 
enable  physicians  in  the  military  service,  air  transportation  industries,  and  govern¬ 
mental  agencies  to  acquire  training  in  preventive  medicine,  occupational  health  and 
other  related  disciplines.  In  addition,  courses  are  provided  to  train  engineers  in  the 
human  and  biological  problems  associated  with  aircraft  design  and  operation. 

The  tremendous  technical  advances  associated  with  high  altitude  aircraft  and  manned 
space  flight  have  increased  the  need  for  advanced  training  of  biological  scientists  in 
environmental  medicine,  protection  of  health  and  human  abilities  in  hazardous  oper¬ 
ating  environments  and  in  problems  of  maintaining  life  with  man-made  environments. 

The  Center  seems  well  situated  to  provide  such  advanced  training.  It  has  an  estab¬ 
lished  core  in  aviation  medicine,  excellent  cross-ties  with  other  departments  of  the 
School  and  with  other  technical  departments  of  the  University  and  M.  I.  T.  A  fellow¬ 
ship  grant  from  NASA  has  made  it  possible  to  begin  an  advanced  training  program 
to  enable  physicians  to  contribute  to  the  solution  of  human  problems  in  space  flight. 
Funds  are  being  sought  to  provide  the  specialized  equipment  to  obtain  additional 
scientific  personnel  for  an  expanded  program  of  research  relating  to  the  many  unsolved 
questions  in  aviation  health  and  safety.  In  particular,  study  of  impaired  human  per¬ 
formance  resulting  from  extremes  of  altitude,  temperature  and  noise  will  be  done  in 
the  future. 


31 


Ross  A.  McFarland 
Head  of  the  Program 


INDUSTRIAL  HYGIENE 


• '  ■ 

MAYIMOM 

ALLOWABL'E 

CoNCEMTRA- 

TlOMS 


Leslie  Silverman 
Head  of  the  Department 
of  Industrial  Hygiene 


32 


OUR  three  areas  of  interest  are  radiological  hygiene,  control  of  air  pollution,  and 
prevention  of  occupational  disease. 

One  study  in  our  area  involves  a  new  approach  to  incineration  of  infectious  and 
low  level  radioactive  animal  wastes.  A  new  oil  fired  boiler  is  being  added  to  the 
Harvard  Medical  Area  power  plant  with  a  means  of  adding  packaged  waste  auto¬ 
matically  to  its  combustion  chamber.  Effluent  particulates  will  be  effectively  removed 
by  an  electrostatic  precipitator  unit.  We  hope  that  this  will  provide  an  answer  for  the 
many  medical  centers  in  the  country  with  similar  problems. 

The  other  study  involves  a  broad  attack  on  the  refuse  and  waste  handling  problems 
of  a  large  metropolitan  community  such  as  Greater  Boston.  Our  approach  has  been 
to  develop  the  concept  of  shipboard  incinerators  for  both  municipal  wastes  as  well  as 
demolition  materials  from  urban  renewal  efforts.  The  shipboard  concept  removes  the 


Standing,  left  to  right — Norman  Peterson,  Stanley  Dawson,  Shlomo  Devir,  Ernest  Mitchell,  Fred 
Weideman,  Thomas  Baldwin,  Thomas  O’Connor,  Ely  Bulba,  Paul  Zilles.  Sitting — Jean  Cudde, 
Gloria  Golich,  Mary  Corrigan,  Jacob  Shapiro,  Leslie  Silverman,  Janet  Walkley,  Delia  Croteau, 

Robert  Yoder,  Melvin  First. 


pollution  sources  from  the  community  air  and  provides  a  mechanism  whereby  coastal 
metropolitan  areas  can  use  the  sea  some  20  miles  offshore  as  disposal  sites.  The  wastes 
would  be  burned  on  shipboard  far  offshore  from  the  nearby  cities.  Incinerated  ash 
and  non-combustibles  would  be  safely  dumped  overboard.  We  believe  it  may  assist 
in  developing  fish  population  as  well  as  eliminate  air  and  land  pollution.  Our  planned 
research  studies  for  the  over-all  project  will  involve  analyses  of  the  transport  system; 
the  marine  biology  and  oceanography  aspects;  and  an  evaluation  of  the  meteorological 
regimes  that  will  be  involved.  The  results  of  this  long-range  study  may  be  applicable 
to  many  other  communities. 


33 


Leslie  Silverman 
Head  of  the  Departoient 


EPIDEMIOLOGY 


Brian  MacMahon 
Head  of  the  Department 
of  Epidemiology 


E 


iAHiiuyiuiK 


34 


IN  the  developmental  control  over  the  infectious  and  nutritional  diseases,  the  study 
of  the  distribution  of  disease  between  and  within  populations  has  repeatedly  proved 
of  value  in  (a)  pointing  to  preventive  measures  that  could  be  effective  even  in  the 
absence  of  knowledge  of  underlying  etiologic  mechanisms,  and  (b)  identifying  areas 
within  which  laboratory  methods  might  most  profitably  be  employed  to  elucidate 
etiologic  mechanisms.  The  primary  objective  of  the  Department  of  Epidemiology  is 
to  stimulate  and  encourage  the  application  of  similar  methods  of  study  to  those 
diseases  for  which  we  still  lack  adequate  control  methods.  Numerically  speaking,  the 
most  important  of  these,  in  this  country  and  in  most  parts  of  the  world  are  cancer, 
mental  illness  and  cardiovascular  disease. 


Brian  MacMahon 
Head  of  the  Department 


Left  to  right — Naphtali  Brand,  Morton  Levy,  George  Hutchison,  Eva  Salber,  Henry  Wechsler, 
Katherine  Shreeve,  Brian  MacMahon,  Thomas  Pugh,  Theo  Abelin,  Herbert  Ley,  Ascher  Segall. 


35 


John  Snyder 

Acting  Head  of  Department 
of  Demography  &  Human 
Ecology 


DEMOGRAPHY  AND 
HUMAN  ECOLOGY 


Disturbing  issues  occasionally  have  arisen  for  medical  and  health  experts  as  they 
have  reduced  the  immediate  ravages  of  a  disease  in  a  particular  area  only  to 
observe  that  their  work  contributed  to  an  increase  in  misery.  Despite  gnawings  of 
conscience  there  has  been  very  little  organized  effort  within  the  profession  of  public 
health  to  deal  directly  with  the  serious  problems  arising  from  increased  population 
density. 

This  Department  is  expected  to  become  an  integral  part  of  Harvard’s  new  Center 
for  Population  Studies.  I  am  deeply  involved  in  developing  plans  and  amassing  the 
financial  resources  needed  to  assure  the  success  of  the  Center.  Research  in  the  Center 
will  be  closely  coordinated  with  field  work  in  several  different  regions  of  the  world. 
A  new  curriculum  of  study  and  supervised  experience  will  be  evolved  which  will 
qualify  our  graduates  for  major  roles  in  the  activities  of  states  and  nations  in  the  regu¬ 
lations  of  their  populations.  The  long-range  objectives  are  concerned  with  defining 
"optimum  population’’  in  the  broad  context  of  human  and  economic  resources,  social 
needs,  and  scientific  advances. 

John  C.  Snyder 

Acting  Head  of  the  Department 


Left  to  right — Stephen  Finner,  Rosemary  Carpenter,  David  Heer,  John  Wyon. 


37 


38 


NUTRITION 


Ever  since  I  have  been  at  Harvard  (1942),  my  major  aim  has  been  to  develop 
and  maintain  a  department  of  nutrition  in  the  health  and  medical  area  that  will 
really  be  outstanding  as  an  academic  unit — outstanding  in  teaching,  in  research,  and 
in  service.  I  feel  we  have  such  a  department. 

Many  of  the  leaders  m  nutrition  in  our  country  and  elsewhere  are  former  students 
of  ours.  Outstanding  research  accomplishments  include  the  development  of  a  fat  emul¬ 
sion  suitable  for  parenteral  nutrition;  the  use  of  the  monkey  in  cardiovascular  research 
particularly  in  the  experimental  production  of  atherosclerosis;  the  development  and 
description  of  biochemically  different  types  of  obesity;  and  the  development  of  the 
Cardioverter  for  correcting  most  abnormal  rhythms  of  the  heart.  In  service,  there  is 
hardly  a  nutrition  committee  of  any  of  the  United  Nations  organizations,  of  our  own 
government,  or  of  most  of  the  voluntary  health  organizations  that  does  not  have  one 
of  our  staff.  People  have  heard  of  Harvard’s  Department  of  Nutrition  from  the  service 
it  gives  to  local  PTA  groups  and  science  fairs  to  international  committees. 

Goals  for  the  future.^  Complete  the  payments  for  our  new  research  facilities  sooner 
than  scheduled.  Two  endowed  chairs  of  nutrition.  An  endowment  of  sufficient  magni¬ 
tude  so  that  the  department  can  keep  its  independence. 

To  continue  to  do  well  in  teaching,  research,  and  service,  we  must  do  better! 

Fredrick  J.  Stare 

Head  of  the  Department 


Left  to  right — Martha  F.  Trulson,  Robert  P.  Geyer,  D.  Mark  Hegsted,  Stanley  N.  Gershoff,  Jean 
Mayer,  Oscar  W.  Portman,  Patricia  A.  Stefanik,  Robert  B.  McGandy. 


39 


STUDENTS  AT  HSPH 1964 


Barry  Sinithurst,  Harry  Ashe,  David  Weeks,  Thomas  Byrd. 


40 


Ray  DiNapoli,  Dick  Easton,  Bryant  Savage,  Warren  Hodge. 


Stanley  Dryden,  John  Peters,  Joe  Cimino. 


Captane  Thomson,  Arvid  Steen, 


Bernard  Gray,  Kevin  Allman,  Emma  Kraidman, 
Norris  Hansell. 


Manning  Feinleib,  Robert  Carroll,  Irving  Kessler,  Virginia  Hannon. 


rr 

•u 

1. 

1 1 

0  ^BPP^ 

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1  # 

9tl  1 

#  ' 

Ky 

K&v 

■i^ « 

J 

. . . .  -  —»■  .  t. 

.  -a 

w 

«  fl 

‘m  ^ 

Anton  Veirling,  Robert  Veit,  Larry  Samuels,  Norman  Hasler. 


Roger  Connelly,  Keith  MacGaffey,  Leo  Riley,  Lena  Wettermark,  Lloyd  LeZotte. 


Kenneth  Aycock,  Maureen  Molloy,  Julius  Conner,  Hernando  Posada. 


Mary  Ann  McNichol,  Adetokunbo  Lucas,  William  Jobin,  Catherine  Coolidge. 


Charles  Buncher,  Nadipuram  Parthasarathy,  David  Nitzberg. 


Alfonso  Holguin,  Edward  Pratt,  Walter  Kemmerer,  Omar  Zawawi. 


Stephen  Plank,  George  Brown,  Abdur  Rashid. 


Helen  Reinherz,  Emma  Kraidman. 


Elizabeth  Watkins,  Max  Bulian,  Marion  Hosack. 


Scott  Allen,  Diana  Fischer,  Gary  Friedman. 


Donald  Logsdon,  Kathleen  Hawkins,  David  Rabin. 


Anne  Schaefer,  Parker  Reist,  Joseph  Brain,  Dwight  Underhill. 


Ken  Curtis,  Ken  Cottle,  William  King,  Richard  Salina. 


Michael  Varner,  Theodore  Georgiadis. 


Aune  Martikainen,  Kirby  Campbell. 


Julio  Maiztegui,  Keith  Sikes,  Erik  Rasmussen,  Ram  Tewari. 


51 


HAIL  AND  FAREWELL 


This  is  the  age  of  slogans — quip 
phrases  that  summarize  wishes,  hopes 
and  aspirations.  At  the  end  of  the  year 
1963-64,  we  can  adopt  the  slogan;  "We 
will  meet  again.” 

We  will  meet  again  with  our  colleagues 
who,  at  work  and  in  our  leisure  hours, 
have  given  us  the  benefit  of  their  com¬ 
panionship. 

We  will  meet  again  with  members  of 
the  Faculty  of  the  School  who  guided 
and  encouraged  our  academic  endeavours. 

We  will  meet  again  with  the  staff. 
Faculty  wives,  and  other  friends  of  the 
School  who  in  various  ways  contributed 
to  the  success  of  our  stay  at  the  School. 

Meanwhile,  we  bid  farewell  to  one 
and  all,  with  the  very  best  wishes  for 
success  and  happiness,  and  with  pleasant 
anticipation  of  our  future  meetings. 

'We  will  meet  again.’ 

Adetokunbo  Lucas 
Class  Preslcle?7f 


PRESIDENT 
Adetokunbo  Lucas 


VICE  PRESIDENT 
Captane  Thomson 


CLASS  OFFICERS 


SECRETARY 

Kathleen  Hawkins 


TREASURER 
Robert  Carroll 


52 


Left  to  right — Captane  Thomson,  Keith  Sikes,  Richard  Easton,  Maureen  Molloy,  Julius  Conner, 

Barry  Smithurst,  Bill  Kemmerer. 


YEAR  BOOK  COMMITTEE 


Captane  Thomson 
Bill  Kemmerer  ... 

Keith  Sikes  . 

Richard  Easton  . 

Maureen  Molloy  .. 

Julius  Conner  . 

Barry  Smithurst  ... 
Norris  Hansell  ... 


. . Co-Editor 

. Co-Ed  it  or 

. Support 

Art  and  Layout 

. Photography 

. Biographies 

. Activities 

. Analysis 


CLAIRE  WASSERBOEHR 
Year  Book  Secretary 


53 


FORUM  COMMITTEE 

Left  to  right — Erik  Rasmussen,  Ram  Tewari,  Arnold  Kisch,  Ed  Pratt,  Dave  Rabin. 


FOR  UM  SPEAKERS 


Dr.  Richard  Dagy . 

Dr.  Philip  Lee . . 

Dr.  Richard  Easton . . 

Dr.  Fred  Soper . . 

Professor  John  Kenneth  Galbraith 


. . . Aramco’s  Health  Program. 

. Medical  Program  of  A.I.D. 

. Manned  Space  Flight. 

. Yellow  Fever. 

Politics  and  Diplomacy  of  Privation. 
. Peace  Corps  Medical  Program 


Dr.  Richard  Smith 


54 


COFFEE 

LOUNGE 


Foreground — Dr.  Erickson,  Dr.  Young. 


SOCIAL  COMMITTEE 


Omar  Zawawi,  Chairman 
Hope  Snider 

Frances  Grommets 

Eric  Rasmussen 

Bob  Smith 

Ed  Pratt 


Omar  Zawawi 


55 


l-iviu  cu 


INTERNA  TIONAL 
HOUSE 


Barry  Smithurst,  Bob  Veit,  George  Brown,  John  Yoder,  D.  Carroll,  Ajay  Pathak,  Nancy  Weeks, 
Norris  Hansell,  Virginia  Hannon.  Absent — Mrs.  M.  Penrose,  H.  Martilcaine. 


HOUSE  COMMITTEE 


57 


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Kg. 

lI-t.  y 

4.^:4  ij  ' 

PS 

---f jy 

XT 

tn  'W 

^1”  HOUSE  IN  REVIEW—  ^63  -  ’64 

Boo!  Who's  that?  A  tiger  on  the  way  to  the  Halloween  Party  ...  to  join  petit 
kimonoed  kittens,  caspers,  and  cowboys  .  .  .  who  collected  $2  for  UNICEF. 

Easels,  canvas,  turp  and  talkers  converged  Wednesday  evenings  for  the  ladies’  oil- 
painting  sessions. 

Two  turkeys  .  .  .  six  dishes  of  rice  .  .  .  twelve  pumpkin  and  mince-meat  pies  .  .  . 
twenty-four  children  .  .  .  many  more  adults  ...  all  gathered  together  to  give  thanks. 

Santa  Lucia  came  to  the  children’s  Christmas  Party  and  so  did  Santa  Claus  .  .  .  Later 
Santa  found  "Little  Maggie  Penrose”  and  gave  her  a  hubbly-bubbly.  Surprise! 

Banjos,  guitars  .  .  .  Leo,  Cap,  and  George  .  .  .  Tokunbo's  piano  jaz2  ...  all  on  a 
Friday  night ! 

Musical  girls  .  .  .  three  men  for  you  and  none  for  me  .  .  .  international  debate  .  .  . 
a  midnight  supper  .  .  .  welcomed  a  glorious  New  Year  .  .  .  danced  the  high-life  at  two! 

Mid-Eastern  fajafel  .  .  .  tabbouleh  .  .  .  Indian  poories  .  .  .  curries  .  .  .  Japanese 
tempura  .  .  .  chopped,  blended,  rolled,  stirred,  fried  .  .  .  familiar  and  strange  ingredi¬ 
ents  became  taste  treats  in  cook  classes ! 

Love  me  .  .  .  Love  me  not  .  .  .  Goldilocks  broke  Baby  Bear’s  chair! 

"Good  upright  style,  but  we  are  practicing  slanting  style”  .  .  .  Mrs.  Sugano  and 
Mrs.  Kawai  taught  "Ikebana”  .  .  .  generated  a  new  love  and  respect  for  flowers. 

Faculty  Wives  saw  International  House  wives’  wares  .  .  .  painting  .  .  .  flowers  .  .  . 
crafts  .  .  .  sampled  goodies  ...  at  tea. 

See  you  at  Chez  Gourmet  .  .  .  superb  food  .  .  .  the  entertainment — Whee! 

Diane  R.  ("Dee”)  Carroll 


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LIBRARY  COMMITTEE 


Sitt'nig — Diana  Gerdener,  Gabrielle  Allman.  Standing — 
Virginia  Hannon,  Ram  Tewari,  Barry  Smithurst. 


MUSIC  COMMITTEE 


Left  to  right — John  Gardner,  George  Brown,  Kay  Keiser, 
Julius  Conner.  Missing — Collin  Dawes. 


HEALTH  AND  SAFETY 
COMMITTEE 


Left  to  right — Stan  Dryden,  Mike  Varner,  Bob  Veit, 
Norris  Hansell,  Cap  Thomson. 


59 


CHILDREN'S  COMMITTEE 


Left  to  right,  hiside  Jungle — Anna  and  Annika  Levy,  Elizabeth  and  Olle  Karlstrom,  Ajay  Pathak. 
Loreground — Barbara  Curtis,  Nancy  Weeks,  Stephanie  Levy,  Sharon  Varner,  Sushma  Pathak, 

M.  A.  and  Sanjay  Pathak. 


60 


ACTIVITIES 


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FACULTY 


DIVISION  OF  ENVIRONMENTAL  HEALTH  SCIENCES 

AND  ENGINEERING 

James  L.  Whittenberger,  S.B.,  M.D.,  A.M.  (hon.),  Head  of  the  Division 

DEPARTMENT  OE  INDUSTRIAL  HYGIENE 

Leslie  Silverman,  S.B.,  S.M.,  S.M.  in  Eng.,  S.D.,  Professor  of  Engineering  in  Environ¬ 
mental  Hygiene  and  Head  of  the  Department 
Charles  R.  Williams,  A.B.,  A.M.,  Ph.D.,  Professor  of  Applied  Industrial  Hygiene 
George  E.  Wilkins,  A.B.,  M.D.,  Associate  Clinical  Professor  of  Occupational  Medicine 
Charles  E.  Billings,  S.B.  in  M.E.,  S.M.,  Associate  Professor  of  Industrial  Hygiene  Engi¬ 
neering  (Absent  1963-64) 

Melvin  W.  First,  S.B.,  S.M.,  S.D.,  Associate  Professor  of  Applied  Industrial  Hygiene 
Richard  Dennis,  S.B.,  S.M.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Industrial  Hygiene 
Jacob  Shapiro,  S.B.,  S.M.,  Ph.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Biophysics  in  Environmental 
Hygiene 

William  A.  Burgess,  S.B.  in  M.E.,  S.M.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Environmental  Health 
and  Safety  Engineering 

Robert  E.  Yoder,  S.B.,  S.D.  in  Hyg.,  Associate  in  Radiological  Hygiene 
Allen  D.  Brandt,  S.B.,  S.M.,  S.D.,  Visiting  Lecturer  on  Industrial  Hygiene  Engineering 
Nathan  Van  Hendricks,  B.E.,  Chem.  E.,  Visiting  Lecturer  on  Industrial  Hygiene  Engi¬ 
neering 

Lawrence  S.  Cooke,  Visiting  Lecturer  on  Illumination 

James  M.  Austin,  B.A.,  M.A.,  S.D.,  Visiting  Lecturer  on  Meteorology  and  Air  Pollution 

Allen  L.  Cudworth,  S.B.,  S.M.,  Visiting  Lecturer  on  Control  of  Noise  in  Industry 

Ashley  St.  Clair,  A.B.,  LL.B.,  Visiting  Lecturer  on  Workmen’s  Compensation 

Horace  W.  Gerarde,  S.B.,  S.M.,  M.D.,  Ph.D.,  Visiting  Lecturer  in  Industrial  Toxicology 

Robert  A.  Gussman,  S.B.,  S.M.,  Research  Associate  in  Industrial  Hygiene  Engineering 

Charles  A.  Mitchell,  S.B.,  S.M.,  Assistant  in  Industrial  Hygiene 

Shlomo  E.  Devir,  M.Sc.,  Dr.  Phil.,  Research  Fellow  in  Industrial  Hygiene 

Thomas  C.  O’Connor,  B.Sc.,  M.Sc.,  Ph.D.,  Research  Fellow  in  Air  Pollution  Control 

Harriet  L.  Hardy,  A.B.,  M.D.,  Lecturer  on  Medicine 

Albert  O.  Seeler,  A.B.,  M.D.,  Clinical  Associate  in  Medicine 

DEPARTMENT  OE  PHYSIOLOGY 

James  L.  Whittenberger,  S.B.,  M.D.,  A.M.  (hon.),  James  Stevens  Simmons  Professor  of 
Public  Health,  Professor  of  Physiology  and  Head  of  the  Department 
Ross  A.  McFarland,  A.B.,  Ph.D.,  S.D.  (hon.),  Daniel  and  Florence  Guggenheim  Pro¬ 
fessor  of  Aerospace  Health  and  Safety 
Jere  Mead,  S.B.,  M.D.,  Associate  Professor  of  Physiology 

Benjamin  G.  Ferris,  Jr.,  A.B.,  M.D.,  Associate  Professor  of  Environmental  Health  and 
Safety 

Edward  P.  Radford,  Jr.,  M.D.,  Associate  Professor  of  Physiology 
Mary  O.  Amdur,  S.B.,  Ph.D.,  Associate  Professor  of  Toxicology 
William  H.  Forbes,  A.B.,  A.M.,  Dr.  Phil.,  M.D.,  Lecturer  on  Physiology 
Harben  J.  Boutourline- Young,  M.B.,  B.S.,  M.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Physiology 
(Absent  1963-64) 


64 


N.  Robert  Frank  A.B.,  M.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Physiology 
Sheldon  D.  Murphy,  S.B.,  Ph.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Toxicology 
Roland  C.  Moore,  A.B.,  A.M.,  Ph.D.,  Associate  in  Industrial  P.sychology 
Richard  G.  Domey,  S.B.,  Ed.M.,  Ed.D.,  Associate  in  Environmental  Health  and  Safety 
Howard  W.  Stoudt,  Jr.,  A.B.,  A.M.,  Ph.D.,  S.M.  in  Hyg.,  Associate  in  Physical  Anthro¬ 
pology 

Hervey  B.  Elkins,  A.B.,  Ph.D.,  Lecturer  on  Industrial  Toxicology 
John  M.  Tyler,  A.B.,  M.D.,  Research  Associate  in  Physiology 

Norman  H.  Mackworth,  M.B.,  Ch.B.,  Ph.D.,  Senior  Research  Associate  in  Physiological 
Psychology 

Thomas  J.  Crowley,  S.B.,  S.M.,  Research  Associate  in  Environmental  Health  and  Safety 

Dorothy  B.  Chamberlin,  S.B.,  M.P.H.,  Research  Associate  in  Physiology 

Vilma  R.  Hunt,  B.D.S.,  M.A.,  Research  Associate  in  Physiology 

John  B.  Little,  A.B.,  M.D.,  Instructor  in  Physiology 

Mary  E.  Beck,  A.B.,  M.D.,  Research  Fellow  in  Physiology 

Leonard  I.  Kleinman,  A.B.,  M.D.,  Research  Fellow  in  Physiology 

Jules  R.  Schwaber,  A.B.,  M.D.,  Research  Fellow  in  Physiology 

George  S.  Tune,  B.A.,  Ph.D.,  Research  Fellow  in  Biotechnology 

David  E.  Leith,  A.B.,  M.D.,  Research  Fellow  in  Physiology 

Herman  F.  Froeb,  A.B.,  M.D.,  Research  Fellow  in  Physiology 

Kimio  Konno,  M.D.,  Research  Fellow  in  Physiology 

Serafettin  Tombuloglu,  M.D.,  Research  Fellow  in  Physiology 

Eiji  Yokoyama,  M.D.,  Dr.  Med.  Sc.,  Research  Fellow  in  Physiology 

Charles  D.  Cook,  A.B.,  M.D.,  Associate  Clinical  Professor  of  Pediatrics 

Robert  G.  Monroe,  A.B.,  M.D.,  Research  Associate  in  Pediatrics 

Joseph  M.  Miller,  A.B.,  M.D.,  M.P.H.,  Instructor  in  Medicine 

DEPARTMENT  OF  SANITARY  ENGINEERING 

J.  Carrell  Morris,  S.B.,  A.M.,  Ph.D.,  A.M.  (hon.),  Gordon  McKay  Professor  of  Sanitary 
Chemistry  and  Acting  Head  of  the  Department 
Gordon  M.  Fair,  S.B.,  S.M.  (hon.).  Dr.  Ing.  (hon.).  Dr.  (hon.),  Sc.D.  (hon.),  Abbott 
and  James  Lawrence  Professor  of  Engineering,  Gordon  McKay  Professor  of  Sanitary 
Engineering 

Harold  A.  Thomas,  Jr.,  S.B.,  S.M.,  S.D.,  Gordon  McKay  Professor  of  Civil  and  Sanitary 
Engineering 

Werner  Stumm,  Dr.  Phil.,  A.M.  (hon.).  Associate  Professor  of  Applied  Chemistry 
Charles  Walcott,  A.B.,  Ph.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Applied  Biology 
Myron  B.  Fiering,  A.B.,  S.M.,  Ph.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Engineering  and  Applied 
Mathematics 

Richard  L.  Woodward,  B.S.C.E.,  S.M.,  Ph.D.,  Senior  Research  Associate  in  Sanitary 
Engineering 

Elisabeth  A.  M.  Stumm,  Dr.  Phil.,  Research  Associate  in  Applied  Biology 
Joseph  J.  Harrington,  B.C.E.,  A.M.,  Ph.D.,  Research  Associate  in  Environmental  Health 
Engineering 


DEPARTMENT  OF  BIOSTATISTICS 

Robert  B.  Reed,  A.B.,  A.M.,  Ph.D.,  A.M.  (hon.).  Professor  of  Biostatics  and  Head  of 
the  Department 

Jane  Worcester,  A.B.,  Dr.  P.H.,  Professor  of  Biostatics  and  Epidemiolo.rty 


Margaret  E.  Drolette,  A.B.,  Associate  in  Biostatics  (Absent  1963-64) 

Marvin  N.  Glasser,  B.B.A.,  M.P.H.,  S.D.  in  Hyg.,  Associate  in  Biostatics  and  Epidemi¬ 
ology 

Paul  M.  Densen,  A.B.,  S.D.,  Visiting  Lecturer  on  Biostatics 
Jane  A.  Menken,  A.B.,  S.M.  in  Hyg.,  Assistant  in  Biostatics 

Anthony  E.  Bartholomay,  A.B.,  A.M.,  S.D.  in  Hyg.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Mathematical 
Biology 


DEPARTMENT  OE  DEMOGRAPHY  AND 
EIUMAN  ECOLOGY 

John  C.  Snyder,  A.B.,  M.D.,  Henry  Pickering  Walcott  Professor  of  Microbiology,  Acting 
Head  of  the  Department 

William  H.  Forbes,  A.B.,  A.M.,  Dr.  Phil.,  M.D.,  Lecturer  on  Physiology,  Assistant  to 
the  Dean,  and  Faculty  Advisor  to  Foreign  Students 
(ohn  B.  Wyon,  B.A.,  M.B.,  B.Ch.,  M.P.H.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Population  Studies 
Ansley  J.  Coale,  A.B.,  A.M.,  Ph.D.,  Visiting  Lecturer  in  Demography 
Ronald  Freedman,  A.B.,  A.M.,  Ph.D.,  Visiting  Lecturer  in  Demography 
Robert  G.  Potter,  Jr.,  A.B.,  A.M.,  Ph.D.,  Visiting  Scholar  in  Demography 
Mary  L.  New,  S.B.,  M.P.H.,  Research  Associate  in  Demography  and  Human  Ecology 
Stephen  J.  Plank,  Ph.B.,  A.B.,  M.D.,  M.P.H.,  Teaching  Fellow  in  Demography  and 
Human  Ecology 

DEPARTMENT  OE  EPIDEMIOLOGY 

Brian  MacMahon,  M.D.,  Ph.D.,  D.P.H.,  S.M.  in  Hyg.,  Professor  of  Epidemiology  and 
Head  of  the  Department 

Jane  Worcester,  A.B.,  Dr.  P.H.,  Professor  of  Biostatics  and  Epidemiology 
Thomas  F.  Pugh,  M.D.,  M.P.H.,  Associate  Clinical  Professor  of  Epidemiology 
Albert  Damon,  A.B.,  Ph.D.,  M.D.,  Associate  Professor  of  Epidemiology 
George  B.  Hutchison,  A.B.,  M.D.,  M.P.H.,  Associate  Professor  of  Epidemiology 
Herbert  L.  Ley,  Jr.,  M.D.,  M.P.H.,  Associate  Professor  of  Epidemiology  and  Applied 
Microbiology 

Ascher  J.  Segall,  M.D.,  M.P.H.,  Dr.  P.H.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Epidemiology 
Marvin  N.  Glasser,  B.B.A.,  M.P.H.,  S.D  in  Hyg.,  Associate  in  Biostatics  and  Epidemi¬ 
ology 

Ernest  M.  Gruenberg,  A.B.,  M.D.,  M.P.H.,  Dr.  P.H.,  Visiting  Lecturer  on  Epidemiology 

Morris  Siegel,  M.D.,  M.P.H.,  Visiting  Lecturer  on  Epidemiology 

Vaun  A.  Newill,  S.B.,  M.D.,  S.M.  in  Hyg.,  Visiting  Lecturer  on  Epidemiology 

Eva  J.  Salber,  M.B.,  Ch.B.,  D.P.H.,  M.D.,  Senior  Research  Associate  in  Epidemiology 

Samuel  G.  McClellan,  A.B.,  M.D.,  M.P.H.,  Research  Associate  in  Epidemiology 

David  C.  Poskanzer,  A.B.,  M.D.,  M.P.H.,  Research  As.sociate  in  Epidemiology 

Theodor  Abelin,  Dr.  Med.,  M.P.H.,  Research  Fellow  in  Epidemiology 

Morton  A.  Levy,  A.B.,  M.D.,  Research  Fellow  in  Epidemiology 

Louis  Weinstein,  S.B.,  S.M.,  Ph.D.,  M.D.,  Lecturer  on  Infectious  Diseases 

Henry  Wechsler,  A.B.,  A.M.,  Ph.D.,  Research  Associate  in  P.sychology 

DEPARTMENT  OE  MATERNAL  AND  CHILD  HEALTH 

William  M.  Schmidt,  S.B.,  M.D.,  A.M.  (hon.),  Profes.sor  of  Maternal  and  Child  Health 
and  Head  of  the  Department 


66 


Elizabeth  P.  Rice,  A.B.,  S.M.,  Associate  Professor  of  Public  Health  Social  Work 
Leon  SternfelJ,  S.B.,  M.D.,  Ph.D.,  M.P.H.,  Associate  Professor  of  Applied  Maternal 
and  Child  Health  and  Deputy  Commissioner  of  Health,  Commonwealth  of  Massachu¬ 
setts 

Edward  A.  Mason,  A.B.,  M.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Mental  Health 
Isabelle  Valadian,  M.D.,  M.P.H.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Maternal  and  Child  Health 
Harold  Jacobziner,  S.B.,  M.D.,  M.P.H.,  Visiting  Lecturer  on  Maternal  and  Child  Health 
Arthur  J.  Lesser,  A.B.,  M.D.,  M.P.H.,  Visiting  Lecturer  on  Maternal  and  Child  Health 
Samuel  B.  Kirkwood,  A.B.,  M.D.,  S.D.  (hon.),  Visiting  Lecturer  on  Maternal  Health 
Edwin  M.  Gold,  S.B.,  M.D.,  Visiting  Lecturer  on  Maternal  and  Child  Health 
Alan  F.  Guttmacher,  A.B.,  M.D.,  Visiting  Lecturer  on  Maternal  Health 
Helen  D.  Cohn,  M.P.H.,  Instructor  in  Applied  Public  Health  Nursing 
Derek  Robinson,  M.B.,  Ch.B.,  D.P.H.,  D.C.H.,  M.D.,  Instructor  in  Maternal  and  Child 
Health 

Use  E.  Gorbach,  A.B.,  M.D.,  M.P.H.,  Instructor  in  Child  Health 

Benjamin  Sachs,  A.B.,  M.D.,  M.P.H.,  Instructor  in  Maternal  and  Child  Health 

Arthur  J.  Salisbury,  S.B.,  M.D.,  M.P.H.,  Instructor  in  Child  Health 

Zelma  B.  Miller,  S.B.,  Ph.D.,  Senior  Research  Associate  in  Maternal  and  Child  Health 

Ruth  M.  Butler,  A.B.,  S.M.,  Research  Associate  in  Social  Work 

Miriam  C.  Ekdahl,  S.B.,  S.M.  in  S.S.,  Assistant  in  Social  Work 

Sylvia  G.  Krakow,  S.B.,  M.S.W.,  Assistant  in  Social  Work 

Ruth  A.  Cowin,  S.B.,  S.M.,  Assistant  in  Social  Work 

Roberta  A.  Savitz,  A.B.,  M.D.,  Research  Assistant  in  Maternal  and  Child  Health 
Charles  A.  Janeway,  A.B.,  M.D.,  A.M.  (hon.),  Thomas  Morgan  Rotch  Professor  of 
Pediatrics 

Duncan  E.  Reid,  S.B.,  M.D.,  A.M.  (hon.),  William  Lambert  Richardson  Professor  of 
Obstetrics 

Clement  A.  Smith,  A.B.,  A.M.,  M.D.,  A.M.  (hon.),  S.D.  (hon.).  Associate  Professor  of 
Pediatrics  at  the  Boston  Lying-In  Hospital 
William  Berenberg,  A.B.,  M.D.,  Assistant  Clinical  Professor  of  Pediatrics 
Robert  J.  Haggerty,  A.B.,  M.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Pediatrics 
Lendon  Snedeker,  A.B.,  M.D.,  M.P.G.,  Instructor  in  Pediatrics 

DEPARTMENT  OE  MICROBIOLOGY 

John  C.  Snyder,  A.B.,  M.D.,  Henry  Pickering  Walcott  Professor  of  Microbiology  and 
Head  of  the  Department 

Geoffrey  Esdall,  M.D.,  Professor  of  Applied  Microbiology  and  Superintendent  of  Insti¬ 
tute  of  Laboratories,  Department  of  Public  Health  of  Massachusetts 
Edward  S.  Murray,  A.B.,  M.D.,  M.P.H.,  Associate  Professor  of  Microbiology  and  Assist¬ 
ant  Physician  to  University  Health  Services 
Samuel  D.  Bell,  Jr.,  A.B.,  M.D.,  M.P.H.,  Associate  Professor  of  Microbiology 
Robert  S.  Chang,  B.Sc.,  M.D.,  S.D.  in  Hyg.,  Associate  Professor  of  Microbiology 
Charlotte  C.  Campbell,  S.B.,  Associate  Professor  of  Medical  Mycology 
Herbert  L.  Ley,  Jr.,  M.D.,  M.P.H.,  Associate  Professor  of  Epidemiology  and  Applied 
Microbiology 

Roger  L.  Nichols,  A.B.,  M.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Applied  Microbiology  (Absent 
1963-64) 

Robert  A.  MacCready,  S.B.,  M.D.,  Associate  in  Microbiology  and  Director  of  Diagnostic 
Laboratories,  Department  of  Public  Health  of  Massachusetts 


67 


James  A.  McComb,  D.V.M.,  Associate  in  Public  Health  Immunology  and  Director  of 
Biologic  Laboratories,  Department  of  Public  Health  of  Massachusetts 
Robert  B.  Pennell,  S.B.,  S.M.,  Ph.D.,  Lecturer  on  Immunology 
Herald  R.  Cox,  A.B.,  S.D.,  S.D.,  (hon.).  Visiting  Lecturer  on  Microbiology 
Robert  J.  Huebner,  M.D.,  Visiting  Lecturer  on  Microbiology 
John  H.  Hanks,  S.B.,  Ph.D.,  Visiting  Lecturer  on  Microbiology 

Charles  H.  Rammelkamp,  A.B.,  M.D.,  S.D.  (hon.),  Visiting  Lecturer  on  Microbiology 
Nadim  A.  Haddad,  B.A.,  M.D.,  M.P.H.,  Research  Associate  in  Microbiology  (Absent 
196.3-64) 

John  W.  Vinson,  S.B.,  S.D.  in  Hyg.,  Research  Associate  in  Microbiology 

Kenneth  F.  Girard,  S.B.,  M.Sc.,  Ph.D.,  Research  Associate  in  Microbiology 

Maria  Ebe  Reca,  Dr.  Chem.,  Research  Associate  in  Medical  Mycology 

Dorothy  E.  McComb,  S.B.,  Assistant  in  Microbiology 

Leo  Levine,  S.B.,  Assistant  in  Microbiology 

Jane  M.  D.  O’Connor,  S.B.,  Assistant  in  Microbiology 

Grace  C.  Yuan,  B.S.,  M.D.,  Research  Assistant  in  Microbiology 

Herman  Polet,  M.D.,  Research  Fellow  in  Microbiology 

Augusto  B.  Martins,  B.Sc.,  M.Sc.,  Dr.  Phil.,  Research  Fellow  in  Microbiology 

DEPARTMENT  OE  NUTRITION 

Frederick  J.  Stare,  S.B.,  S.M.,  Ph.D.,  M.D.,  A.M.  (hon.),  S.D.  (hon.),  Professor  of 
Nutrition  and  Head  of  the  Department 
David  M.  Hegsted,  S.B.,  S.M.,  Ph.D.,  A.M.  (hon.).  Professor  of  Nutrition 
Robert  P.  Geyer,  S.B.,  S.M.,  Ph.D.,  Associate  Professor  of  Nutrition 
Jean  Mayer,  B.A.,  B.Sc.,  M.Sc.,  Ph.D.,  D.Sc.,  Associate  Professor  of  Nutrition  and 
Lecturer  on  the  History  of  Public  Health 

Martha  F.  Trulson,  S.B.,  M.P.H.,  S.D.  in  Hyg.,  Associate  Professor  of  Nutrition 

Stephen  B.  Andrus,  S.B.,  M.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Pathology 

Stanley  N.  Gershoff,  A.B.,  S.M.,  Ph.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Nutrition 

Oscar  W.  Portman,  S.B.,  M.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Nutrition 

Joseph  J.  Vitale,  S.B.,  S.M.,  S.D.  in  Hyg.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Nutrition 

Bernard  Lown,  S.B.,  M.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Medicine 

Maria  Banasiewicz-Rodriguez,  M.D.,  M.P.H.,  Associate  in  Nutrition 

Robert  B.  McGandy,  A.B.,  M.D.,  M.P.H.,  Associate  in  Nutrition 

Madge  L.  Myers,  A.B.,  S.M.,  Instructor  in  Nutrition 

Patricia  A.  Stefanik,  S.B.,  S.M.,  Instructor  in  Nutrition 

Edwin  L.  Prien,  A.B.,  A.M.,  M.D.,  Clinical  Research  Associate  in  Nutrition 

F.  Russell  Olsen,  A.B.,  Research  Associate  in  Nutrition 

Robert  E.  Clancy,  M.D.,  Research  Associate  in  Medicine 

Oscar  M.  Jankelson,  M.D.,  Research  Associate  in  Medicine 

Carl  C.  Seltzer,  A.B.,  Ph.D.,  Research  Associate  in  Physical  Anthropology 

Ethel  J.  Bowie,  S.B.,  Assistant  in  Nutrition 

Dorothy  Bruno,  S.B.,  Assistant  in  Nutrition 

Kathleen  M.  Broell,  S.B.,  S.M.  in  Hyg.,  Assistant  in  Nutrition 

Lenore  F.  Monello,  A.B.,  A.M.,  Assistant  in  Nutrition 

Harold  E.  Lewis,  B.Sc.,  M.B.,  Ch.B.,  Senior  Research  Fellow  in  Nutrition 

Katsutaka  Seta,  M.D.,  Dr.  Med.  Sc.,  Research  Fellow  in  Nutrition 

Michihiro  Sugano,  B.S.,  M.S.,  Ph.D.,  Research  Fellow  in  Nutrition 

Werner  Stauffacher,  M.D.,  Research  Fellow  in  Nutrition 


68 


Agnes  M,  Huber,  B.Sc.,  Ph.D.,  Research  Fellow  in  Nutrition 

Beverly  Anne  Bullen,  S.B.,  S.M.,  S.M.  in  Hyg.,  S.D.  in  Hyg.,  Research  Fellow  in  Nutri¬ 
tion 

Anik  A.  Girard,  B.A.,  D.V.M.,  Research  Fellow  in  Nutrition 
Hiroshi  Okaniwa,  M.D.,  Dr.  Med.  Sc.,  Research  Fellow  in  Nutrition 
James  H.  Shaw,  B.A.,  S.M.,  Ph.D.,  A.M.  (hon.).  Associate  Professor  of  Biological 
Chemistry,  Harvard  School  of  Dental  Medicine 
Ira  Gore,  A.B.,  M.D.,  Lecturer  on  Pathology 
Norman  Zamcheck,  A.B.,  M.D.,  Clinical  Associate  in  Medicine 
Earl  E.  Hellerstein,  A.B.,  M.D.,  Associate  in  Pathology 
Daniel  S.  Bernstein,  A.B.,  M.D.,  Instructor  in  Medicine 
Harold  J.  White,  S.B.,  M.D.,  Instructor  in  Pathology 

DEPARTMENT  OE  PUBLIC  HEALTH  PRACTICE 

Robert  H.  Hamlin,  A.B.,  B.S.M.,  M.B.,  M.D.,  M.P.H.,  LL.B.,  Roger  Irving  Lee  Profes¬ 
sor  of  Public  Health,  Director  of  the  Interfaculty  Program  on  Health  and  Medical 
Care  and  Head  of  the  Department 

Alfred  L.  Frechette,  M.D.,  M.P.H.,  Clinical  Professor  of  Public  Health  Practice  and 
Commissioner  of  Public  Health,  Commonwealth  of  Massachusetts 
Leonid  S.  Snegireff,  M.D.,  M.P.H.,  Dr.  P.H.,  Associate  Professor  of  Chronic  Disease 
Control 

Gerald  Caplan,  B.Sc.,  M.B.,  Ch.B.,  D.P.M.,  M.D.,  Associate  Professor  of  Mental  Health 
Sol  Levine,  A.B.,  A.M.,  Ph.D.,  Associate  Professor  of  Social  Psychology 
Elizabeth  P.  Rice,  A.B.,  S.M.,  Associate  Professor  of  Public  Health  Social  Work 
Marjorie  A.  C.  Young,  S.B.,  Ed.M.,  M.P.H.,  Dr.  P.H.,  Associate  Professor  of  Health 
Education 

Wallace  H.  Best,  A.B.,  A.M.,  Ph.D.,  Lecturer  on  Public  Administration 
Edward  A.  Mason,  A.B.,  M.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Mental  Health 
Louisa  P.  Howe,  A.B.,  A.M.,  Ph.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Mental  Health 
Sydney  H.  Croog,  A.B.,  A.M.,  Ph.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Sociology 
Lenin  A.  Baler,  A.B.,  A.M.,  Ph.D.,  S.M.  in  Hyg.,  S.D.  in  Hyg.,  Assistant  Professor  of 
Mental  Health 

Roy  Penchansky,  S.B.,  M.I.L.R.,  D.B.A.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Administration  in  Medi¬ 
cal  Care 

Norman  A.  Scotch,  A.B.,  A.M.,  Ph.D.,  S.M.  in  Hyg.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Social  An¬ 
thropology 

Charlotte  E.  Owens,  S.B.,  M.P.H.,  Associate  in  Mental  Health 

Harry  T.  Phillips,  M.B.,  Ch.B.,  D.P.H.,  M.D.,  Lecturer  on  Public  Health  Practice 

Leon  J.  Taubenhaus,  A.B.,  M.D.,  M.P.H.,  Lecturer  on  Public  Health  Practice 

Rhona  V.  Rapoport,  B.Sc.,  Ph.D.,  Lecturer  on  Mental  Health 

Bellenden  R.  Hutcheson,  S.B.,  M.B.,  M.D.,  Lecturer  on  Mental  Health 

Edward  B.  Kovar,  A.B.,  A.M.,  Lecturer  on  Public  Health  Practice 

Olive  M.  Lombard,  B.Sc.,  S.M.  in  Hyg.,  Instructor  in  Public  Health  Practice 

Mary  D.  Bain,  A.B.,  M.D.,  Instructor  in  Mental  Health 

Saul  Cooper,  A.B.,  A.M.,  Instructor  in  Mental  Health 

John  G.  McCormick,  S.B.,  S.M.,  Instructor  in  Health  Education 

Elizabeth  K.  Caso,  S.B.,  S.M.,  in  Hyg.,  Instructor  in  Nutrition  (Chronic  Di.sea.se) 

Frances  H.  Pitts,  S.B.,  S.M.,  M.P.H.,  Instructor  in  Health  Education 
Donald  Ottenstein,  S.B.,  M.D.,  Instructor  in  Mental  Health 


69 


James  E.  Teele,  A.B.,  A.M.,  Ph.D.,  Research  Associate  in  Sociology 
William  J.  Ryan,  A.B.,  A.M.,  Ph.D.,  Research  Associate  in  Mental  Health 
Peggy  J.  Golde,  A.B.,  Ph.D.,  Research  Associate  in  Mental  Health 
Douglas  E.  Hooper,  B.A.,  Ph.D.,  Research  Associate  in  Mental  Health 
Alan  P.  Sheldon,  B.A.,  M.B.,  B.  Chir.,  M.A.,  D.P.M.,  S.M.  in  Hyg.,  Research  Assistant 
in  Mental  Health 

Charles  M.  Bryant,  A.B.,  M.D.,  M.P.H.,  Teaching  Fellow  in  Public  Health  Practice 
Erich  Lindemann,  Dr.  Phi.,  M.D.,  A.M.  (hon.).  Professor  of  Psychiatry 
Shields  Warren,  A.B.,  M.D.,  S.D.  (hon.),  LL.D.,  Professor  of  Pathology  at  the  New 
England  Deaconess  Hospital 

Sidney  Farber,  S.B.,  M.D.,  Dr.  P.H.  (hon.),  S.D.  (hon.),  Professor  of  Pathology  at  the 
Children’s  Hospital 

James  M.  Dunning,  A.B.,  D.D.S.,  M.P.H.,  Clinical  Professor  and  Head,  Department  of 
Ecological  Dentistry,  Harvard  School  of  Dental  Medicine  and  Director,  Dental  Health 
Service,  University  Health  Services 

William  J.  Curran,  LL.B.,  LL.M.,  S.M.  in  Hyg.,  Lecturer  on  Legal  Medicine,  Harvard 
Law  School,  (Utley  Professor  of  Legal  Medicine,  Director,  Law-Medicine  Research 
Institute,  Boston  University) 

Mary  Lee  Ingbar,  S.B.,  A.M.,  Ph.D.,  M.P.H.,  Research  Associate  in  the  Graduate  School 
of  Public  Administration 

Gerald  D.  Rosenthal,  A.B.,  S.M.,  Ph.D.,  Instructor  in  Economics 

DEPARTMENT  OF  TROPICAL  PUBLIC  HEALTH 

Thomas  H.  Weller,  A.B.,  S.M.,  M.D.,  LL.D.,  Richard  Pearson  Strong  Professor  of 
Tropical  Public  Health  and  Head  of  the  Department 
Franklin  A.  Neva,  S.B.,  M.D.,  Associate  Professor  of  Tropical  Public  Health 
Eli  Chernin,  S.B.,  A.M.,  S.D.,  Associate  Professor  of  Tropical  Public  Health 
Charlotte  C.  Campbell,  S.B.,  Associate  Professor  of  Medical  Mycology 
Thomas  E.  Frothingham,  M.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Tropical  Public  Health 
Chia-tung  Pan,  B.Sc.,  M.D.,  M.P.H.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Tropical  Public  Health 
Edward  H.  Michelson,  S.B.,  S.M.,  Ph.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Tropical  Public  Health 
Paul  F.  Russell,  A.B.,  M.D.,  M.P.H.,  S.D.  (hon.).  Visiting  Lecturer  on  Tropical  Public 
Health 

Fred  L.  Soper,  A.B.,  S.M.,  M.D.,  Dr.P.H.,  S.D.  (hon.),  Visiting  Lecturer  on  Tropical 
Public  Health 

George  M.  Saunders,  A.B.,  M.D.,  Visiting  Lecturer  on  Tropical  Public  Health 
Samuel  W.  Simmons,  S.B.,  A.M.,  Ph.D.,  Visiting  Lecturer  on  Tropical  Public  Health 
G.  Robert  Coatney,  A.B.,  A.M.,  Ph.D.,  S.D.  (hon.).  Visiting  Lecturer  on  Tropical 
Public  Health 

Harry  Most,  S.B.,  M.D.,  D.T.M.&H.,  D.M.S.,  Visiting  Lecturer  on  Tropical  Public 
Health 

Richard  H.  Daggy,  S.B.,  S.M.,  Ph.D.,  M.P.H.,  Dr.  P.H.,  Visiting  Lecturer  on  Tropical 
Public  Health 

Andrew  Spielman,  S.B.,  S.D.,  Associate  in  Tropical  Public  Health 
Charles  A.  Alford,  S.B.,  M.D.,  Research  Fellow  in  Tropical  Public  Health 
Joseph  W.  Burnett,  A.B.,  M.D.,  Research  Fellow  in  Tropical  Public  Health 
F.  Xavier  Pi-Sunyer,  A.B.,  M.D.,  M.P.H.,  Research  Fellow  in  Tropical  Public  Health 
Gustave  Dammin,  A.B.,  M.D.,  A.M.  (hon.),  Elsie  1'.  Friedman  Professor  of  Path¬ 
ology,  Harvard  Medical  School  and  Peter  Bent  Brigham  Hospital 
Fran2  C.  von  Lichtenberg,  M.D.,  DR.  (hon.).  Assistant  Professor  of  Pathology,  Harvard 
Medical  School  and  Senior  Associate  in  Pathology,  Peter  Bent  Brigham  Hospital 


70 


STUDENT  BIOGRAPHIES 


ALLEN,  SCOTT  I. 

(B.A.,  Pomona  Coll.,  1955;  M.D.,  Yale  LIniv.,  1959;  Univ.  of  Michi¬ 

gan,  1961.) 

Candidate  for  S.M.  in  Hyg.  (Biostatistics). 

Research  Fellow,  Mass.  General  Hospital:  on  assignment  from  U.S.P.H.S. 

1455  Commonwealth  Avenue,  Apt.  218,  Brighton,  Mass. 

Wife:  Edith 
Son:  Donald 


ALLMAN,  KEVIN  M. 

(M.B.,  B.Ch.,  Univ.  College,  Dublin,  1956;  D.P.H.,  Liverpool  Univ.,  1960; 
D.P.M.,  Univ.  Coll.,  Dublin,  1962;  M.R.C.P.L,  Royal  Coll,  of  Physicians, 
Ireland,  1963.) 

Candidate  for  S.M.  in  Hyg.  (Community  Mental  Health). 

Psychiatrist,  Dublin  Health  Authority,  Ireland. 

97  Home  Farm  Road,  Dublin  9,  Ireland. 

Wife:  Gabrielle 

ASHE,  HARRY  J. 

(A.B.,  Wesleyan  Univ.,  1956:  M.D.,  Tufts  Univ.,  1961.) 
Candidate  for  M.P.H.  (Tropical  Public  Health). 

Medical  Resident,  Maine  Med.  Center,  Portland,  Me. 

North  Main  Street,  Wolfeboro,  N.  H. 

Wife:  Carole 
Sons:  Harry  3,  Andrew  4 
Daughter:  Laura  1 

AYCOCK,  EZRA  KENNETH 
(A.B.,  Duke  Univ.,  1950;  M.D.,  Med.  Coll,  of  S.  C.,  1954.) 

Candidate  for  M.P.H.  (Maternal  and  Child  Health). 

Asst.  Director,  M.C.H.,  South  Carolina. 
l401  Kathwood  Drive,  Columbia,  S.  C. 

Wife:  Mary  (Echo) 

Son:  Kenny  3 
Daughter:  Dee  Dee  41/2 


BELLIN,  LOWELL  E. 

(B.S.,  Yale  Univ.,  1948;  M.D.,  N.  Y.  Downstate  Med.  Center,  1951.) 
Candidate  for  M.P.H.  (Public  Health  Practice). 

Commissioner  of  Public  Health,  Springfield,  Mass. 

74  Forest  Glen  Road,  Longmeadow,  Mass. 

Wife:  Talah 
Son:  Eran  7 
Daughter:  Eva  5 


BRAIN,  JOSEPH  DAVID 

(B.A.,  Taylor  Univ.,  1961;  S.M.,  Harvard  LIniv.;  S.M.  in  Hyg.,  Harvard 
School  Public  Health,  1963.) 

Candidate  for  S.D.  in  Hyg. 

9  Bertrand  Drive,  Wayne,  N.  J. 

Wife:  Judy 


BROWN,  GEORGE  E. 
(M.D.,  Univ.  of  Toronto,  1961.) 

Candidate  for  M.P.H. 

FCjSxi'.n,  MEDICO  project  in  Haiti. 

23  McMaster  Ave.,  Toronto,  Ont.,  Canada. 

Wife:  Judith 


71 


BULBA,  ELY 

( B.Sc.,  Technion,  Israel  Inst,  of  Technology,  Haifa,  1957;  Dipl.  Engenieur, 
Technion,  Israel  Inst.  Tech.,  1959.) 

Candidate  for  S.M.  in  Hyg.  (Ind.  Hyg.) 

Research  Engineer,  HSPH,  Dept.  Ind.  Hyg. 

29  Concord  Ave.,  Cambridge,  Mass. 


BULIAN,  MAX  J. 

(B.S.,  Tufts  Univ.,  1943;  M.D.,  Tufts  Med.  School,  1946.) 
Candidate  for  M.P.H. 

Private  Prac.— OBS-GYN. 

44  Valley  Rd.,  Chestnut  Hill  67,  Mass. 

Wife;  Adele 

Sons:  John  IIV2,  Joseph  8 
Daughter:  Emily  7 


BUNCHER,  CHARLES  RALPH 
(S.B.,  Mass.  Inst.  Tech.,  I960.) 

Candidate  for  S.M.  in  Hyg.  (Biostatistics). 

Ship  Superintendent,  San  Francisco  Naval  Shipyard;  Lt.  U.S.  Naval  Reserve. 
44  Whittingham  Terrace,  Millburn,  N.  J. 


BURGER,  EDWARD  J.,  JR. 

(B.S.,  McGill  Univ.,  1954;  M.D.,  McGill  Univ.,  1958;  M.I.H.,  Harvard 
School  Public  Health,  1961.) 

Candidate  for  S.D.  in  Hyg.  (Physiology). 

U.S.  Navy 

Wilsondale  St.,  Dover,  Mass. 

Wife;  Sarah 

Daughters:  Heidi  28  mos.,  Hilary  2V2  wks. 


BYRD,  THOMAS  R.  (Lt.  USN) 

(B.S.,  Clemson  College,  1957;  M.D.,  Medical  College  of  S.  C.,  1961.) 

Candidate  for  M.P.H. 

Head,  Hlth.  Practices  Branch,  Prev.  Med.  Div.,  Bur.  of  Med.  &  Surg.,  Dept, 
of  Navy,  Washington,  D.  C. 

Route  4,  Kershaw,  S.  C. 


CAMPBELL,  KIRBY  1. 

(B.S.,  Univ.  of  Calif.,  1955;  D.V.M.,  Univ.  of  Calif.,  1957.) 

Candidate  for  M.P.H. 

U.S.P.H.S.  Proj.  Veterinary  Officer,  Air  Pollution  Research  Center,  Univ.  of 
Calif.,  Riverside,  Calif. 

21  Clifton  Ave.,  Los  Gatos,  Calif. 

Wife;  Constance 
Daughter;  Lauren 


CARROLL,  ROBERT  E. 

(A.B.,  Stanford  Lffiiv.,  1957;  M.D.,  Albany  Med.  Coll.,  1961) 
Candidate  for  M.P.H.  (Epidemiology). 

Resident  in  Epid.,  N.  Y.  State  Dept.  Health. 

1 1  Kenaware  Ave.,  Delmar,  N.  Y. 

Wife:  Diane  (Dee) 

Sons:  James  21/2,  Lawrence  1  yr. 

CIMINO,  JOSEPH  ANTHONY 

(A.B.,  Harvard  Coll.,  1956;  M.S.,  Fordham  Lffiiv.,  1958;  M.D.,  Univ.  of 
Buffalo,  1962.) 

Candidate  for  M.I.H.  (Occupational  Medicine). 

A.E.C.  Fellow  in  Occupational  Medicine. 

2  Burnsdale  Ave.,  Valhalla,  N.  Y. 

Wife:  Margaret 
Son:  Joseph  IV2 

Daughters:  Andrea  5,  Laura  4,  Lisa  2V2.  Linda  V2 


72 


CONNELLY,  ROGER  R 
(B.S.,  Iowa  State  Univ.,  1958.) 

Candidate  for  S.M.  in  Hyg. 

Statistician,  Natl.  Cancer  Inst..  NIH,  Bethesda,  Md. 
Mason  City,  Iowa 
Wife:  Shirley 
Daughter:  Lorraine  1  yr. 


CONNER,  JULIUS  S. 

(B.A.,  Univ.  of  Om:rha,  1954;  M,D.,  Univ.  of  Nebraska,  1957.) 

Candidate  for  M.P.H.  (Maternal  and  Child  Health). 

Asst.  Director,  Des  Moines  Polk  County  Dept,  of  Health,  Des  Moines,  Iowa. 
5002  S.W.  15th  Street,  Des  Moines,  Iowa  50315. 

Wife:  Salina 

Sons:  Chuckie  7,  Chris  4 

Daughter:  Beth  2  mo. 


COOLIDGE,  CATHERINE 

(A.B.,  Radcliffe  Coll.,  1953;  M.D.,  John  Hopkins  School  Med.,  1958.) 

Candidate  for  M.P.H. 

Asst.  Resident  Medicine,  Hospital  Universitario  del  Valle,  Gali,  Colombia,  S.A. 
Manchester,  Mass. 


COTTLE,  KENNETH  E. 

(M.D.,  Southwestern  Med.  School,  Dallas,  Texas,  1956.) 

Candidate  for  M.P.H.  (Aviation  Medicine). 

Chief,  Aerospace  Medicine  and  Professional  Services  Div.,  30th  Air  Div. 
(SAGE)  ADC,  Truax  Field,  Wise.;  School  of  Aerospace  Med.,  Brool:s  Air 
Force  Base,  Texas. 

1601  S.  Blackburn  Street,  Brady,  Texas 
Wife:  Hattie  Bell 

CUDWORTH,  ALLEN  L. 

(S.B.,  Univ.  of  Alabama,  1949:  S.M.,  Mass.  Institute  of  Technology,  1952.) 

Candidate  for  S.D.  in  Hyg.  (Industrial  Hygiene). 

Director  of  Research  and  Development,  Liberty  Mutual  Insurance  Co.,  Boston. 

8  Mark  Road,  Framingham,  Mass. 

Wife:  Cynthia 
Sons:  Lindsay  7,  James  3 
Daughter:  Ann  8 

CURTIS,  KENNETH  W.,  JR. 

(B.S.,  Beloit  Coll.,  1955;  M.D.,  Univ.  of  Illinois,  1959.) 

Candidate  for  M.P.H.  (Aviation  Medicine). 

Flight  Surgeon,  USAF,  in  Japan;  School  of  Aerospace  Med.,  Brooks  AFB, 
Texas. 

10444  So.  Wood  Street,  Chicago,  Illinois. 

Wife:  Barbara 
Son:  Kenneth,  III,  9  mos. 

Daughter:  Linda  4 

DiNAPOLI,  RAPHAEL  JOSEPH,  JR. 

(B.A.,  Coll,  of  the  Holy  Cross,  1955;  M.D.,  State  Univ.  of  New  York,  Down- 
state  Coll,  of  Med.,  1959.) 

Candidate  for  M.P.H.  (Aerospace  Medicine). 

Sr.  Flight  Surgeon  and  A\’iation  Med.  Advisor  to  the  Military  District  of 
Washington  Surgeon,  Davison  Army  Airfield,  Ft.  Belvoir,  Va.;  Resident  in 
Aerospace  Medicine,  USAF  School  of  Aerospace  Medicine. 

838  Carroll  St.,  Brooklyn  15,  N.  Y. 

Wife:  Marianne 


DRYDEN,  STANLEY  L. 
(B.S.,  Calif.  State  Polytechnic  Coll.,  1962.) 

Candidate  for  S  M.  in  Hyg.  (Industrial  Hygiene). 
1240  Dorothy  Drive,  Glendale  2,  Calif. 


73 


EASTON,  RICHARD  E. 

(B.A.,  Univ.  of  Kansas,  1958;  M.D.,  Univ.  of  Kansas,  1962.) 
Candidate  for  M.P.H.  (Aviation  Medicine). 

Fli^ylit  Surgeon,  North  American  Aviation,  Downey,  Calif. 
1024  Mississippi,  Lawrence,  Kansas. 

Wife:  Mary 
Daughter:  Leslie  2 


EEINLEIB,  MANNING 

(A.B.,  Cornell  Llniv.,  195-6;  M.D.,  S.  U.  N.  Y.  Downstate  Med.  Center,  1961; 
Al.P.H.,  Harvard  Univ.,  1963.) 

Candidate  for  Dr.P.H.  (Epidemiology  and  Biostatistics). 

Intern,  Mt.  Sinai  Hosp.,  N.  Y. 

9202  Avenue  A,  Brooklyn  36,  N.  Y. 

Wife;  Marcia 


FISCHER,  DIANA  B. 
(B.A.,  Mt.  Holyoke  Coll.,  1956.) 

Part-time  Student  (Biostatistics). 

Med.  Research  Asst.,  Harvard  Med.  School;  Computer 
M.P.H.  Degree  Program,  Yale  Univ. 

80  Lexington  Ave.,  Cambridge  38,  Mass. 

Husband;  James 


FRIEDMAN,  GARY  D. 

(B.S.,  Univ.  of  Chicago,  1956;  M.D.,  Univ.  of  Chicago,  1959.) 

Candidate  for  S  M.  in  Hyg.  (Biostatistics). 

Med.  Officer,  Heart  Disease  Epidemiology  Study,  U.S.P.H.S.,  Framingham, 
Mass. 

35  Alpine  St.,  Cambridge,  Mass. 

Wife:  Ruth 
Son:  Justin  7  mos. 

Daughter:  Emily  3 


GEORGIADIS,  THEODORE 
(B.S.,  Univ.  of  Athens,  1957.) 

Candidate  for  S.M.  in  Hyg.  (Radiological  Health). 
Chemist,  Greek  Atomic  Energy  Commission. 

83  Venizelou  Ave.  Nea  Smyrni,  Athens,  Greece 


Programmer,  H.S.P.H.; 


GLASS,  ROBERT  L. 

(S.B.,  Harvard  Univ.,  1943:  D.M.D.,  Tufts  Univ.,  1946;  M.P.H.,  Harvard 
Univ.,  1959.) 

Candidate  for  Dr.P.H.  (Epidemiology). 

Professor,  School  of  Dental  Med.,  Tufts  Llniv. 

610  High  Street,  Westwood,  Mass. 

Wife:  Janet 

Sons:  Bradford  18,  Stephen  16 
Daughter:  Robin  1 1 

GRAY,  BERNARD 

(A.B.,  Brooklyn  Coll.,  1956;  Ph.D.,  Brandeis  Llniv.,  I960.) 
Candidate  for  S.M.  in  Hyg.  (Community  Mental  Health). 
Chief,  Psychology  Service,  Mental  Hygiene  Consultation 
Texas. 

158  Harvard  Street,  Brookline,  Mass. 

Wife:  Zha  (Zita) 

Sons:  Josh  2I/2,  Michael  1 


GROMMERS,  FRANCES 

(A.B..  Ratlcliffe  Coll.,  1952;  M.D.,  Harvard  Univ.,  1961.) 
Candidate  for  M.P.H.  (General). 

Intern,  Newton-Wellesley  Hospital. 

63  Mt.  Vernon  Street,  Boston,  Mass. 


Service,  Ft.  Bliss, 


7-1 


HANNON,  VIRGINIA  R. 

(M.A.,  Atlanta  Univ.,  1935;  M.S.W.,  Simmons  Coll.,  1942;  M.S.  in  Hyg., 
Harvard  Univ.,  1961.) 

Candidate  for  S.D.  in  Hyg.  (Epidemiology). 

Assoc.  Professor.  Atlanta  Univ.  School  of  Social  Work. 

227  West  Lake  Drive,  N.W.  Atlanta  l4,  Ga. 


HANSELL,  NORRIS 

(H.A.,  Haverford  Coll.,  1953;  M.D.,  Univ.  of  Penna.,  1958.) 

Candidate  for  S.M.  in  Hyg.  (Community  Mental  Health). 

Wife:  Margaret 

Sons:  Charles  5,  Walter  4 

Daughter:  Ruth  2 


HARFOLICHE,  JAMAL  G.  H. 

(A.B.,  American  Univ.  of  Beirut,  1937;  M.D.,  American  Univ.  of  Beirut,  1941.) 
Candidate  for  Dr.P.H.  (Maternal  and  Child  Health  and  Nutrition). 

Assoc.  Professor,  Maternal  and  Child  Health,  American  LIniv.  of  Beirut. 


HASLER,  NORMAN  B. 

(A.B.,  Indiana  Univ.,  1942;  M.D.,  Indiana  Univ.,  1944.) 
Candidate  for  M.I.H.  (Occupational  Medicine). 

Div.  Med.  Director,  Liberty  Mutual  Insurance  Co.,  Boston. 
1 14  Eastern  Ave.,  Arlington,  Mass.  02174 
Wife:  Catherine 
Son:  John  10 

Daughters:  Elizabeth  13,  Kathleen  12 


HAWKINS,  KATHLEEN 

(B.A.,  Marianopolis  Coll.,  1957;  M.D.C.M.,  McGill  Univ.,  1961.) 

Candidate  for  M.P.H.  (Epidemiology). 

Resident,  New  England  Deaconess  Hospital  (Internal  Medicine);  Resident, 
Public  Health  and  Preventive  Med.,  Boston. 

5225  Hutchinson  St.,  Montreal,  Quebec,  Canada 


HIGHRITER,  MARION  E. 

(B.A.,  Mount  Holyoke  Coll.,  1950;  M.N.,  Yale  Univ.,  1953;  M.P.H.,  Harvard 
Univ.,  1958.) 

Candidate  for  S.D.  in  Hyg.  (Public  Health  Practice). 

Nursing  Supervisor.  San  Juan  Basin  Health  LTnit,  Durango,  Colorado. 

409  W.  Academy  St.,  Wilkes-Barre,  Pa. 


HODGE,  WARREN  W. 

(B.S.,  Univ.  of  Louisville,  1955;  M.D.,  Univ.  of  Louisville,  1958.) 

Candidate  for  M.P.H.  (Aviation  Medicine). 

Flight  Surgeon,  Carrier  Air  Group  16,  U.S.N.;  School  of  Aviation  Medicine, 
Pensacola,  Fla. 

Wife:  Irene 


HOLGUIN,  ALFONSO  H. 

(B.A.,  Texas  Western  Coll.,  1951;  M.D.,  Llniv.  of  Texas,  1957.) 

Candidate  for  M.P.H.  (Public  Health  Practice). 

Ass.  to  the  Chief,  Laboratory  Branch,  Communicable  Disease  Center,  Atlanta, 
Georgia. 

Wife:  Irby  (Anna) 

Sons:  Mark  6,  Paul  1 

Daughters:  Laura  7,  Theresa  5,  Carol  3 


75 


HOSACK,  ALICE  M. 

(B.S.,  Univ.  of  Buffalo,  1945;  M.A.,  Univ,  of  Chicago,  1951; 
Harvard  LIniv.,  1959- ) 

Candidate  for  S.D.  in  Hyg.  (Maternal  and  Child  Health). 

Asst.  Professor,  Boston  Univ.  School  of  Nursing. 

22  Evans  Ways,  Apt.  ID,  Boston,  Mass.  02115 


jOBIN,  WILLIAM  R. 

(S.B.,  Mass.  Inst,  of  Technology,  1959;  S.M.,  M.I.  T.,  1961.) 
Candidate  for  S.M.  in  Hyg.  (Tropical  Public  Health). 

Public  Health  Engineer,  U.S.P.H.S. 

7  Philip  Lane,  Foxboro,  Mass. 

Wife:  Sara 
Daughter:  Maria  2 


KEISER,  A.  KAY 

(B.S.,  Seton  Hall  Univ.,  I960;  M  P.H.,  Yale  LIniv.,  1962.) 
Candidate  for  S  D.  in  Hyg.  (Medical  Care). 

Research  Asst,  in  Medical  Care,  Yale  LIniv.,  New  Haven,  Conn. 
3412  Bainbridge  Ave.,  N.  Y.  67,  N.  Y. 


KEMMERER,  WALTER  W. 
(S.B.,  Univ.  of  Houston,  1953;  M.D.,  Baylor  Univ.,  1959.) 
Candidate  for  M.P.H.  (General). 

Preventive  Medicine  Officer,  US  Army,  Europe. 

1915  Wehtworth  St.,  Houston,  Texas 
Wife:  Florence 

Sons:  Walter  7,  Christopher  10  months 
Daughters:  Carolynne  5,  Katherine  2,  Marianne  1 


KESSLER,  IRVING  1. 

(A.B.,  New  York  Univ.,  1952;  A.M.,  Harvard  Univ.,  1955; 
Univ.,  I960;  M.P.H.,  Columbia  Univ.,  1962.) 

Candidate  for  Dr.P.H.  (Epidemiology). 

Research  staff,  SPH,  Columbia  Univ.,  N.  Y. 

425  S.  Huntington  Ave.,  Jamaica  Plain,  Mass. 

Wife:  Rita 
Daughter;  Abigail  1 


KING,  WILLIAM  H. 

(B.A.,  North  Texas  State  Univ.,  1955;  M.D.,  Univ.  of  Texas,  1959-) 

Candidate  for  M.P.H.  (Aviation  Medicine). 

Flight  Surgeon,  494lh  Bomb  Wing,  Strategic  Air  Command,  Sheppard  AFB, 
Texas. 

104  E.  Sixth,  Irving,  Texas 
Wife:  Audie 


KISCH,  ARNOLD  1. 

(A.B.,  Columbia  Coll.,  1954;  M.D.,  Harvard  Univ.,  195S.) 
Candid  ite  for  M.P.H.  (Public  Health  Practice). 

Asst.  Resident,  Orthopedics,  Children's  Hospital,  Boston. 

21  Chestnut  St.,  Boston  8,  Mass. 

Wife:  Gloria 

Son:  Theodore  2  mos. 


KLEVAY,  LESLIE  M. 

(B.S.,  LIniv.  of  Wisconsin,  1956;  M.D.,  Univ.  of  Wisconsin,  I960;  S.M., 
Harvard  Univ.,  1963  ) 

Candidate  for  S.D.  in  Hyg.  (Nutrition). 

Medical  Intern.  Washington  LIniv.  Med.  Service,  St.  Louis  City  Hospital. 


M.S.  in  Hyg., 


M.D.,  Stanford 


76 


KRAIDMAN,  EMMA 

(B.A.,  Univ.  of  Chicago,  1953;  B.S.,  Brooklyn  Coll.,  1953;  M.A.,  Clark  Univ., 
1955:  Ph.D.,  Clark  Univ.,  1958.) 

Candidate  for  S.M.  in  Hyg.  (Community  Mental  Health). 

Chief  Psychologist  of  Inpatient  Service  and  Neurology  Unit,  Children's  Med. 
Center,  Boston. 

85  Leland  Road,  Chestnut  Hill  67,  Mass. 

Husband;  Leonard 


KUGELL,  LORRAINE  D. 
(B.A.,  Lfniv.  of  Vermont,  1963  ) 

Candidate  for  S.M.  in  Hyg.  (Nutrition). 


LaTORRE,  PHILIP 

(S.B.,  Northeastern  Univ.,  1952;  S.M.,  Harvard  Univ.,  1954.) 

Part-time  Student  (Radiological  Health). 

Chief,  Industrial  Health  &  Safety,  Watertown  Arsenal,  Watertown,  Mass. 
95  Spring  Street,  Wakefield,  Mass. 

Wife;  Margaret 
Sons;  Philip  6,  David  4 


(B.S.,  City  Coll,  of  N.  Y.,  1950;  M.A.,  City  Coll,  of  N. 
Univ.  of  Washington,  1958.) 

■<  '  Candidate  for  S.M.  in  Hyg.  (Community  Mental  Health). 

"  Administrator,  Pueblo  Guidance  Center,  Pueblo,  Colorado. 

199  Park  Drive,  Boston,  Mass. 

Daughters;  Stephanie  4,  Anna  2 

LeZOTTE,  LLOYD  A.,  JR. 

(A.B.,  Univ.  of  Nebraska,  1950;  M.A.,  Univ.  of  Nebraska,  1951;  Ph.D., 
Purdue  Univ.,  1954;  M.D.,  Univ.  of  Puerto  Rico,  I960.) 

Part-time  Special  Student  (Biostatistics). 

Trainee,  Clin.  Pharmacology,  Lemuel  Shattuck  Hosp.,  Tufts  Univ. 

1 1  Tara  Road,  Framingham,  Mass. 

Wife;  Luisa 

Sons;  Lloyd,  Jr.  11,  Raymond  9,  Philip  5,  Francis  1 
Daughter;  Maria  7 


Y.,  1951;  PhD., 


LI,  YLILING 


(B.A.,  Wellesley  Coll.,  1962.) 

Part-time  Student  (Biostatistics). 

Research  Asst,  in  Biometry,  Biomathematics  Lab.,  Harvard  Med.  School. 


LOGSDON,  DONALD  N. 

(B.S.,  Wake  Forest  Coll.,  1956;  M.D.,  Univ.  of  Florida,  I960.) 
Candidate  for  M.P.H.  (Epidemiology). 

Asst.  Health  Ofiicer,  Palm  Beach  Co.  Health  Dept.,  Florida. 

219  Almeria  Road,  W.  Palm  Beach,  Florida 
Wife;  Ann 


LUCAS,  ADETOKUNBO  O. 

(B.S.,  Univ.  of  Durham,  1953;  M.B.,  B.S.,  Univ.  of  Durham,  1956;  D.P.H., 
Queen's  Univ.,  1958;  M.R.C.P.  (Lonck)n),  1959;  D.T.M.&H.,  London  School 
of  Hyg.  and  Trop.  Med.,  I960.) 

Candidate  for  S.M.  in  Hyg.  (Tropical  Public  Health). 

Lecturer,  Prev.  and  Social  Med.,  anti  Consultant  Physician,  LIniv.  Coll.  Hosp., 
Univ.  of  Ibadan,  Ibadan,  Nigeria. 

Wife;  Kofoworola  (Kufu) 

Sons;  'Funlade  5,  'Lapido  4  Daughter;  ’Funto  21/3 


77 


MacGAFFEY,  KEITH 

(A.B.,  Colgate  Univ.,  1955;  M.D.,  Univ.  of  Rochester,  1959.) 

Part-time  Student  (Biostatistics). 

Research  Fellow,  Clin.  Pharmacology,  Tufts  Univ.  (Lemuel  Shattuck  Hosp.) 
62  Summit  Ave.,  Brookline,  Mass. 

Wife:  Mary 

Daughter:  Jennifer  5  mos. 

MAIZTEGUI,  JULIO  1. 

(M.D.,  Buenos  Aires  Llniv.  Med.  School,  1957.) 

Candidate  for  M.P.H.  (Microbiology). 

Research  Fellow  in  Bact.  and  Immunology,  Harvard  Med.  School  and  Boston 
City  Hosp.;  Buenos  Aires  Llniv.  Med.  School  (Dept,  of  Infectious  Diseases). 

Buenos  Aires,  Argentina 
Wife:  Laura 
Son:  Francisco  2 

Daughters:  Laura  5,  Marcela  4,  Maria  1 

MARTIKAINEN,  A.  HELEN 

(A.B.,  Bates  Coll.,  1939;  M.P.H. ,  Yale  Univ.,  1941;  Sc.D.  (Hon.),  Bates  Coll., 
1957.) 

Candidate  for  Dr.P.H.  (Public  Health  Practice). 

Chief,  Health  Education,  World  Health  Or.rranization,  Geneva,  Switzerland. 
Europe:  47  Bis  Florissant,  Geneva;  U.S.A.:  26  Morningside  Drive,  Laconia, 
New  Hampshire. 

MASON,  JAMES  O. 

(B.A.,  Univ.  of  Utah,  1955;  M.D.,  IJniv.  of  Utah,  1958;  M.P.H.,  Harvard 
Univ.,  1963.) 

Candidate  for  Dr.P.H.  (Tropical  Public  Health). 

Epidemiology  Branch,  Communicable  Disease  Center,  Atlanta,  Ga. 

9820  Poppy  Lane,  Sandy,  Utah. 

Wife:  Marie 

Sons:  James  10,  Bruce  5,  Ralph  3,  Samuel  4  mos. 

Daughter:  Susan  7 


MAZUMDER,  MALAY 

(B.S.,  Hooghly  Mohsin  Coll.,  Univ.  of  Calcutta,  1956;  M.Sc.,  Univ.  of  Calcutta, 
1959.) 

Full-time  Student  (Industrial  Hygiene). 

Scientific  Officer.  Atomic  Energy  Establishment,  Bombay,  India. 

Vill.  &  P.  O.  Madral,  Dist.  24-Parganas,  West  Bengal,  India. 


MAZZONE,  WALTER  F. 

(A.B.,  San  Jose  State  ColL,  1941;  B.S.,  Llniv.  of  Southern  Calif.,  1948.) 
Candidate  for  S.M.  in  Hyg.  ( Physiology ) . 

LL  S.  Navy,  Submarine  and  Diving  Research,  Submarine  Base,  Groton,  Conn.; 
Director,  Schot)l  of  Submarine  Med. 

390  Long  Hill  Road,  Groton,  Conn. 

Wife:  Lucie 
Son:  Rt)bert  l4 


McNICHOL,  MARY  A. 
(A.B.,  Boston  Univ.,  1957;  A.M.,  Boston  Llniv.,  1958.) 
Candidate  for  S.M.  in  Hyg.  (Microbiology). 

Peace  Corps  Volunteer. 

38  North  Shore  Ave.,  Danvers,  Mass. 


MOLLOY,  MAUREEN  K. 

(B.A..  Barnard  Coll.,  1953;  M.D.,  State  Univ.  of  N.  Y.,  1957.) 
Candidate  for  S.M.  in  Hyg.  (Maternal  and  Child  Health). 
Resident.  Orthopedic  Surgery,  Mass.  General  Hosp. 

107  Jersey  St.,  Boston  15,  Mass. 


78 


NITZBERG.  DAVID  M. 

(A.B.,  Columbia  Coll.,  1936;  M.S.,  Ohio  State  Univ.,  1957;  S.M.Hy^.,  HarvarJ 
Univ.,  1963.) 

Candidate  for  S.D.  in  Hyg.  (Biostatistics). 

Student,  H.S.P.H. 

22  Stimson  Ave.,  Lexington,  Mass. 

Wife:  Roslyn 
Sons:  Michael  6,  Steven  3 

PARTHASARATHY,  NADIPURAM  R. 

(B.Sc.,  First  Grade  Coll.,  1952;  B.Sc.,  Maharaja's  Coll.,  1955;  M.Sc., 

Candidate  for  S.M.  in  Hyg.  (Biostatistics). 

Asst.  Research  Officer,  National  Trachoma  Control  Program,  Aligarh  (UP, 
India). 

2846,  V.V.  Mohlla,  Mysore  2,  India. 

PETERS,  JOHN  M. 

(B.S.,  Univ.  of  LItah,  1957;  M.D.,  Univ.  of  Utah,  1960) 

Candidate  for  M.P.H.  (Occupational  Medicine). 

Nuclear  Med.  Officer,  U.  S.  Army  Engineers,  Washington,  D.  C. 

Brigham  City,  Utah. 

Wife:  Carolyn 

Sons:  John  5,  Philip  4,  Charles  1  mo. 

Daughter:  Susa  2 

PLANK,  STEPHEN  J. 

(Ph.B.,  Univ.  of  Chicago,  1948;  A.B.,  Univ.  of  Calif.,  1951;  M.D.,  Univ.  of 
Calif.,  1955;  M.P.H.,  Harvard  Llniv.,  1961) 

Candidate  for  Dr.P.H.  (Microbiology). 

Staff  Physician,  Coco  Solo  Hospital,  Panama  Canal  Zone. 

Carmel,  California. 

Wife:  Jean 
Son:  Tino  7 
Daughter:  Suzanne  1 

POLLACK,  EARL  S. 

(B.S.,  Univ.  of  Minnesota,  1947;  M.A.,  Univ.  of  Minnesota,  1948.) 

Candidate  for  S.D.  in  Hyg.  (Biostatistics). 

Chief,  Hospital  Studies  Section,  Biometrics  Branch,  National  Institute  of 
Mental  Health. 

11212  Bybee  St.,  Silver  Spring,  Maryland. 

Wife:  Judith 
Daughter:  Joan  10 


POSADA,  HERNANDO 
(M.D.,  Univ.  Nacional  de  Colombia,  1954.) 

Candidate  for  S.M.  in  Hyg.  (Maternal  and  Child  Health). 

Clinical  and  Research  Fellow,  Children's  Med.  Center,  Boston. 
50  School  St.,  East  Williston,  L.  L,  N.  Y. 

Wife:  Elvirita 


PRATT,  EDWARD  O. 

(M.B.,  L.R.C.P.,  M.R.C.S.,  Royal  Coll,  of  Surgeons,  1954,) 

Candidate  for  M.P.H.  (Public  Health  Practice). 

Med.  Health  Officer,  Dept,  of  Med.  Services,  Lffiiv,  Coll,  of  Sierra  Leone. 
II,  Waterloo  St.,  Freetown,  Sierra  Leone. 


RABIN,  DAVID  L. 

(A.B.,  Univ.  of  Arizona,  1954;  M.D.,  Washington  Univ.  (St.  Louis),  1958.) 
Candidate  for  M.P.H.  (Epitlemiology). 

Sr.  Asst.  Resident  in  Med.,  Cornell-Bellevue  Memt)rial  Hospital,  N.  '5'. 

101  Cottage  Ave.,  Lancaster,  Pa. 

Wife:  Laurel 


79 


t  RASHID,  ABDUR 

(B.Sc.,  Chitagong  Coll,,  1954;  M.Sc.,  Dacca  Univ.,  1956;  M.Sc.,  Karachi 

Candidate  for  S.M.  in  Hyg.  (Biostatistics). 

Statistical  Officer,  Ministry  of  Health,  Govt,  of  Pakistan. 

Village,  Fatehpur,  P.  O.  Madanhat,  Chittagong,  Pakistan. 

Children:  Shahryar  6,  Shahjahan  4,  Shahnewaz  2,  Hasina  6  mos. 


RASMUSSEN,  ERIK  G. 

(D.D.S.,  Copenhagen  Univ,,  1958.) 

Candidate  for  M.P.H.  (Microbiology). 

Research  Fellow  in  Bacteriology,  Forsyth  Dental  Center,  Boston  6,  Witten- 
berggade,  Copenhagen,  Denmark. 

Wife:  Sylvia 


REINHERZ,  HELEN  Z. 

(A.B.,  Wheaton  Coll,,  1944;  Simmons  Coll.,  1946;  S.M. Hyg.,  Harvard  Univ., 

1962.) 

Candidate  for  S.D.  in  Hyg.  (Community  Mental  Health). 

Consultant,  Psychiatric  Social  Work,  Metropolitan  State  FIosp.,  Waltham,  Mass. 
17  Corey  Road,  Malden,  Mass. 

Husband:  Samuel 
Son:  Ellis  13V2 


REIST,  PARKER  C. 

(B.S.,  Penna.  State  Univ.,  1955;  S.M.,  Mass.  Inst,  of  Tech.,  1957;  S.M. Hyg., 

Harvard  Univ.,  19'63.) 

Candidate  for  S.D.  in  Hyg.  (Radiological  Health). 

Sanitary  Engineer,  U.S.P.H.S. 

720  No.  Allen  St.,  State  College,  Pa. 

Wife:  Janet 

RILEY,  LEO  H. 

(A.B.,  Boston  Coll.,  1940;  M.D,,  Boston  Univ.,  1943.) 

Candidate  for  S  M.  in  Hyg.  (Biostatistics  and  Epidemiology) 

Director  of  Research,  American  Center  for  Research  in  Blindness  and  Rehabili¬ 
tation,  Newton,  Mass. 

525  Walnut  St.,  Newtonville,  Mass. 

Wife:  Eleanor 

Sons:  Leo  16,  David  15,  Mark  7,  John  5 
Daughters:  Lenore  13,  Marla  11,  Maureen  9,  Norma  8 

RUNYAN,  WILLIAM  S. 

((B.S.,  Lffiiv.  of  Idaho,  I960;  M.S.,  Univ.  of  Idaho,  1962.) 

Candidate  for  S.D.  in  Hyg.  (Nutrition). 

Research  Asst.  Dept,  of  Nutrition,  H.S.P.H. 

Ukiah,  Calif. 

Wife:  Thora 
Daughter:  Laura  2 


SALINA,  RICHARD  J 

(B.S.,  Univ.  of  Pittsburgh,  1949:  M.D.,  Univ.  of  Pittsburgh, 
Candidate  for  M.P.H.  (Aerospace  Medicine). 

Chief  of  Aerospace  Medicine,  Flickam  Air  Force  Base,  Hawaii. 
6914  Kelly  Street,  Pittsburgh,  Pa. 

Wife:  Grace 
Daughter:  Deborah  6 

SAMUELS,  LARRY  D. 

(A.B.,  Blackburn  Coll.,  1955;  B.S.,  Univ.  of  Illinois,  1957;  M.D.,  Univ.  of 
Illinois,  1959;  S.M.  Hyg.,  Harvard  Univ.,  1961.) 

Candidate  for  S.D.  in  Hyg.  (Radiobiology). 

Director,  Midwest  Environmental  Health  Study,  U.S.P.H.S. 

New  Windsor,  Illinois 
Wife:  Margaret 
Sons:  Larry  5,  Nils  2,  Rolf  2 
Daughters:  Shirley  6,  Lisa  6  mos. 


1954.) 


80 


SAVAGE,  HILBERT  BRYANT,  JR. 
(M.D.,  Univ.,  of  Tennessee,  1958.) 

Candidate  for  M.P.H.  (Aerospace  Medicine). 

Director,  Flight  Med.  Service,  Bergstrom  AFB,  Texas. 

3624  Rhea  Ave.,  Memphis,  Tenn. 

Wife;  Anita 

Daughters;  Dawn  6,  Wendy  4 


SCHAEFER,  ANNE  W. 

(A.B.,  Trinity  Coll.,  1963.) 

Candidate  for  S.M.  in  Hyg.  (Radiological  Health). 

12  Brookside  Drive,  Westport,  Conn. 


SCHRAMM,  VERN  L. 
(B.S.,  South  Dakota  State  Coll.,  1963  ) 

Candidate  for  S.M.  in  Hyg.  (Nutrition). 

Coolidge,  Arizona. 

Wife;  Deanna 


SIKES,  R.  KEITH 

(B.A.,  Emory  Univ.,  1949:  D.V.M.,  Auburn  Univ.,  1957.) 
Candidate  for  M.P.H.  (Microbiology). 

Chief,  Rabies  Investig.  Lab.,  C.D.C.,  U.S.P.H.S. 

2554  Flemington  Road,  Atlanta  29,  Ga. 

Wife;  Narene 

Sons;  Bob  15,  Barry  13,  Tommy  1 


SIMMONS,  ALVIN  J. 

(B.S.,  Boston  Coll.,  1952,  M.S.,  Univ.  of  Massachsusetts,  1954,  Ph.D.,  Univ. 
of  Massachusetts,  1960;  S.M.  Hyg.,  Harvard  Univ.,  1962.) 

Candidate  for  S.D.  in  Hyg.  (Epidemiology  and  Biostatistics). 

Admin.  Asst.,  Human  Relations  Service  of  Wellesley. 

Wellesley  Hills,  Mass. 

7  Middle  St.,  So.  Dartmouth,  Mass. 

Wife;  Joan 

Sons;  Chris  5,  Mike  4,  John  1  Daughters;  Polly  2,  Lacy  1  mo. 


SIMMONS,  HENRY  E. 

(B.S.,  Univ.  of  Pittsburgh,  1951;  M.D.,  LIniv.  of  Pittsburgh,  1957.) 
Candidate  for  M.P.H.  (Public  Health  Practice). 

Private  Practice,  Internal  Medicine. 

3  North  St.,  Lexington,  Mass. 

Wife;  Sally 

Daughters;  Kathleen  9,  Betsy  7,  Molly  4,  Julie  1 


SMITH,  ROBERT  G. 

(S.B.,  Univ.  of  Oklahoma,  1956;  M.D.,  Washington  Univ.  (St.  Louis),  1959; 
L.L.B.,  Harvard  Univ.,  1963.) 

Candidate  for  M.P.H,  (General  Program). 

Asst,  in  Med.,  Peter  Bent  Brigham  Hosp.,  and  Physician,  Harvard  LIniv.  Health 
Services. 

R.F.D.  No.  3,  Broken  Arrow,  Oklahoma. 


SMITHURST,  BARRY  A. 

(M.B.B.S.,  Sydney  Univ.,  1951;  M.R.A.C.P.,  Royal  Australian  Coll,  of  Physi¬ 
cians,  1957.) 

Candidate  for  M.P.H.  (Tropical  Medicine). 

Asst.  Physician,  St.  Vincent's  Hosp.,  Melbourne,  Australia. 


81 


SNIDER,  HOPE  H. 

(A.B.,  Vassal'  Coll.,  1957;  M.D.,  Harvard  Univ.,  1962.) 
Candidate  for  M.P.H.  (General  Program). 

Research  Asst.  Harvard  Dental  School,  Cambridge,  Mass. 
Husband:  Joseph 


STEEN,  ARVID 

(M.D.,  Oslo  Univ.,  1950.) 

Candidate  for  S.M.  in  Hyg.  (Community  Mental  Health). 

Asst.  Director,  Psychiatric  Division,  Norwegian  Health  Services. 
Helsedirektoratet,  Oslo-Dep.,  Oslo,  Norway. 

Wife:  Kari 

Sons:  Gunnar  15,  Arvid  13 


TEWARI,  RAM  P. 

(B.Sc.,  Lucknow  LIniv.,  1956;  B.V.Sc.&A.H.,  Agra  Univ., 
Agra  Univ.,  1962.) 

Candidate  for  S.M.  in  Hyg.  (Microbiology). 

Veterinary  Asst.  Surgeon,  UP,  India. 

699,  Nakamuzuffra,  Eaizabad,  U.P.,  India. 


I960;  M.V.Sc., 


THOMSON,  CAPTANE  P. 

(A.B.,  LIniv.  of  Calif.,  1952;  M.D.,  Univ.  of  Calif.,  1955.) 
Candidate  for  S.M.  in  Hyg.  (Community  Mental  Health). 

Clinical  and  Research  Eellow  in  Psychiatry,  Mass.  General  Hospital. 
5800  Florence  Terrace,  Oakland,  Calif. 

Wife;  Helen 


UNDERHILL,  DWIGHT  W. 
(B.E.,  Yale  Univ.,  1958;  S.M. Hyg.,  Harvard  LIniv.,  1963.) 
Candidate  for  S.D.  in  Hyg.  (Industrial  Hygiene). 

Chemist,  Fort  Detrick,  Md. 

4509  Burlington  Place,  Washington,  D.  C. 


VARNER,  MICHAEL  O. 
(B.S.,  California  State  Polytechnic  Coll.,  1963-) 
Candidate  for  S.M.  in  Hyg.  (Industrial  Hygiene). 
1760  San  Luis  Drive,  San  Luis  Obispo,  Calif. 

Wife:  Sharon 


VEIT,  ROBERT  W. 

(A. A.,  Coll,  of  the  Sequoias,  1959:  B.S.,  Calif.  State  Polytechnic  Coll.,  1962.) 
Candidate  for  S.M.  in  Hyg.  (Industrial  Hygiene). 

Engineering  Student  Trainee,  State  of  Calif.,  Dept,  of  Water  Resources, 
Cayucos,  Calif. 

2001  W.  Laurel,  Visalia,  Calif. 

Wife:  Virgie 
Son;  Kevin  IV2 


VIERLING,  ANTON  E. 

(B.S.,  Univ.  of  Notre  Dame,  1961;  M.S.,  Univ.  of  Connecticut,  1963.) 
Candi(.!ate  for  S.M.  in  Hyg.  (Radiation  Biology). 

L'niv.  Lab.  Instructor. 

207  Park  Dri\e,  Boston,  Mass. 

Wife:  Jacqueline 


82 


WATKINS,  ELIZABEl.I  L. 

(A.B.,  Bryn  Mawr,  1949;  M.S.S.A.,  Western  Reserve  Univ.,  1950;  S.M.Hyg., 
Harvard  Univ.,  1958.) 

Candidate  for  S.D.  in  Hy^.  (Maternal  and  Child  Health). 

Asst.  Professor  of  Social  Work  in  Public  Health,  Elniv.  of  Michigan. 

5  Cutler  Ave.,  Cambridge,  Mass. 


WEEKS,  DAVID  E. 
(M.D.,  Northwestern  Univ.,  1958.) 

Candidate  for  M.P.H  (Tropical  Public  Health). 
Supervising  Physician  for  ARAMCO. 

ARAMCO  2416,  Dhahran,  Saudi  Arabia. 

Wife:  Nancy 

Sons:  David,  II  3V2,  Benjamin  U/2 


WEISS.DEBORAH  H. 
(A.B..  Antioch  College,  1962.) 

Candidate  for  S  M.  in  Hyg.  (Nutrition). 

169  North  Gro\e  Street,  Oak  Park,  Illinois. 


WETTERMARK,  LENA  E.  B. 
(Fil.  Kand.,  Uppsala  Univ.,  1962.) 

Part-time  Student  (Biostatistics). 

Programmer,  Dept,  of  Biostatitsics,  H.S.P.H. 

109  Lakeview  Gardens,  15  Kansas  St.,  Natick,  Mass. 
Husband:  Gunnar 


WORTH,  DOROTHY  J. 
(M.D.,  St.  Louis  Univ.,  1956.) 

Candidate  for  M.P.H.  (Maternal  and  Child  Health). 
School  Physician,  Newton,  Mass. 

33  Washington  St.,  Newton,  Mass. 

Husband:  Robert 

Sons:  Benjamin  6,  Joshua  4 

Daughter:  Rachel  2 


YODER,  JOHN  D. 

(B.S.,  Pennsylvania  State  Univ.,  1952;  S.M.Hyg.,  Harvard  Univ.,  1954.) 
Candidate  for  S.D.  in  Hyg.  (Industrial  Hygiene). 

Industrial  Hygienist,  Humble  Oil  and  Refining  Co.,  Linden,  N.  J. 

94  Pembrook  Drive,  Kenilworth,  N.  J. 

Wife:  Nancy 
Son:  James  6 

Daughters:  Karen  11,  Kathleen  9 


ZAWAWI,  OMAR 
(M.B.B.Ch.,  Cairo  Univ.,  1958.) 

Candidate  for  M.P.H.  (Public  Health  Practice). 

Representative  of  Ministry  of  Health  at  Dammam,  Saudi  Arabia. 
Dammam,  Saudi  Arabia. 

Wife:  Amul 
Son:  Waleed  2 


ZISKIND,  ALAN 

(A.B.,  Columbia  Coll.,  1953;  M.D.,  Boston  Univ.,  1957.) 
Candidate  for  M.P.H.  (Maternal  and  Child  Health). 
Pediatrician,  Private  Practice. 

32  Douglas  Road,  Belmont,  Mass. 

Wife:  Barbara 

Sons:  Andrew  5,  Mark  4,  Michael  2 


83 


SPECIAL  THANKS 


DEE  CARROLL — The  broad  strokes  of  her  word  pictures  sketch  the 
activities  that  have  filled  the  year  at  the  International  House. 

DICK  EASTON — Special  mention  goes  to  the  Yearbook  Committee’s 
original  and  creative  layout  man. 

TED  POLUMBAUM — Our  photographer  mixed  efficiency,  humor 
and  imagination  in  the  variegated  postures  and  poses  in  which  he 
captured  us. 

SARGENT  SHRIVER — While  indicating  that  formal  permission  or 
approval  from  the  family  for  the  dedication  to  our  late  President, 
John  E.  Kennedy,  was  not  necessary,  Mr.  Shriver  said,  "I  can 
think  of  no  reason  for  anyone  to  object  to  your  very  generous 
and  warm-hearted  gesture.” 

CLAIRE  WASSERBOEHR — As  our  indefatigable  Yearbook  secretary 
and  morale  booster,  she  has  consulted  on  traditional  practices, 
chased  down  delinquent  contributions,  and  done  a  yeoman’s  job 
on  the  manuscript. 

NANCY  WEEKS — The  bold  cover  design  evolved  through  tour  de¬ 
velopmental  stages.  Her  design  on  the  Christmas  card  has  been 
the  model  for  the  world  distribution  of  the  class  inside  the  cover. 


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